The O in lose has a long U (long OO) vowel sound, as in whose. The E is silent.
Oh, dude, you're really diving into the deep questions here. So, technically, the word "cheer" has a long vowel sound because the "ee" makes the long /i:/ sound. But hey, don't lose sleep over it, it's just a word, you know? Like, you do you, man.
The O in the word "lose" has a long OO (long U) sound, and a silent E.(The S makes a Z sound, so the pronunciation is "looz." The similar word that actually has two O's is loose, which is pronounced "loo-s.")
The only likely candidate is been, which sounds like bin (short I vowel sound).There are prefixed words such as reenter and preeminent which have both a long E and short E (or rarely I). In some pronunciations, some of these may lose the long E (e.g. preelection).There are also French words, such as sautéed and fiancée, which have a long A sound instead.
Yes. The A has a long A sound as in plate and vague.
give up give in lose forfeit
Oh, dude, you're really diving into the deep questions here. So, technically, the word "cheer" has a long vowel sound because the "ee" makes the long /i:/ sound. But hey, don't lose sleep over it, it's just a word, you know? Like, you do you, man.
The O in the word "lose" has a long OO (long U) sound, and a silent E.(The S makes a Z sound, so the pronunciation is "looz." The similar word that actually has two O's is loose, which is pronounced "loo-s.")
Some "long" vowels "say their name."examples:ape (long a)evil (long E)ice (long I)over (long O)use (long U)Some long U vowels do not "say their name," for example the long U in dune or flute,and the long U (OO) of choose and lose.
The only likely candidate is been, which sounds like bin (short I vowel sound).There are prefixed words such as reenter and preeminent which have both a long E and short E (or rarely I). In some pronunciations, some of these may lose the long E (e.g. preelection).There are also French words, such as sautéed and fiancée, which have a long A sound instead.
No
The words lose, prove, and move (and words based on them) have the long OO sound.
you don't lose sound. it might be your speakers or the conversion program
yes as long as they are responsible and don't lose it
Yes. The A has a long A sound as in plate and vague.
In short term, you lose concentration and you forget the differences between to and too.In long term, it can damage your eye sight, your posture, etc.
Most likely there is a short in the wiring. This is a somewhat common problem with the Toyota echo, what happens is cargo in the trunk bumps the back of the rear speaker, causing a wire to come lose or break off, which can cause a short and you lose sound completely. Take a good close look at the wires to the speakers in the trunk. If you don't care about sound coming from the rear speakers and you don't want to fix it, you can just cut damaged wiring and tape it off, this will restore sound to the front speakers.
Play baseball... Lose... Mostly lose, though.