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The O in rose is a long O vowel sound, as in robe and hose.

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12y ago

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Related Questions

Is rose a short vowel?

Yes, the letter "o" in the word "rose" is a short vowel sound.


Does rose have a long o vowel sound?

Yes. The O has a long O sound (oh) and the E is silent.


Does rose have a short or long vowel sound?

It has a long O sound, as in rows, to rhyme with hose and nose. The E is silent.


Does the word rose have a short o sound or a long o sound?

The word "rose" has a long o sound, pronounced as /roʊz/. This long vowel sound is characteristic of the vowel combination "o-e," where the "e" at the end signals that the "o" is pronounced as a long vowel. In contrast, a short o sound would be heard in words like "hot" or "cot."


Does rose have a long or short sound?

Rose has a short sound, pronounced as "rohz."


Does rose have a long or short o?

Rose has a short "o" sound.


Does rose have a long o?

does rose have short or long o sound


Does rose have a long o sound?

No. A single e at the end of a word is always short.


Does rose have the short o sounds?

No, the word "rose" does not have the short "o" sound (/ɑ/ or /ɒ/). The pronunciation of "rose" uses the long "o" sound (/oʊ/).


Does rows and clothes rhyme?

No, "rows" and "clothes" do not rhyme as they have different vowel sounds. "Rows" sounds like "rose" with a long 'o' sound, while "clothes" sounds like "cloze" with a short 'o' sound.


Does the word problem have a short vowel?

Both the vowels in problem are short. The 'o' is short, as in cot, rather than long as in rose. The 'e' is short as in leg, rather than long as in gene.


How to say A rose by any other name would smell as sweet. in hawaiian?

He loke i nā inoa `ē a`e inā honi ā onaona. Spoken as hě lō-kě ē nä ē-nō-wā (short break in the voice to separate the vowel before and after) ě(hold vowel sound for a little longer) ä-(short break)-ě ē-nä(hold sound) hō-nē ä(hold sound) ō-näō-nä. ě - short e sound as in "let", ō - long o sound as in "oh", i(ē) - long e sound as in "bee", ä - augmented a sound as in "all", näō - same sound as "now". Strangely, though the words are Hawaiian, the phrase is not but rather a direct translation of the English phrase.