The OO pair is a digraph. It could only be considered a diphthong when it is "short." The long OO is a single sound like other long vowels. The pair can also rarely have the sound of a short U (blood).
The long sound is the OO sound (cool, moon, boot) and the same as some words with a long U (dune, Flute, rule) that have no yoo sound.
The short OO is an oo-ah sound as in book, good, and foot, also made by O in wolf and by OU in could and should.
No, the word "toothpaste" does not contain a short vowel. It has the diphthong "oo" in the first syllable, which is considered a long vowel sound.
"Female" is considered to have a long vowel sound due to the pronunciation of the letter "e" as a diphthong /iː/.
The vowel sound is neither long or short. It is the diphthong ou/ow as in cow and crown.
Yes, "tie" has a long vowel sound as in /taɪ/. The "ie" in "tie" creates a diphthong, which is a combination of two vowel sounds. So, it is not considered a short vowel.
No, the word "breeze" does not contain a long vowel. The "ee" in "breeze" represents a diphthong, which is a combination of two vowel sounds. The pronunciation of "breeze" has a short vowel sound.
No, the word "toothpaste" does not contain a short vowel. It has the diphthong "oo" in the first syllable, which is considered a long vowel sound.
"Female" is considered to have a long vowel sound due to the pronunciation of the letter "e" as a diphthong /iː/.
The vowel sound is neither long or short. It is the diphthong ou/ow as in cow and crown.
Yes, "tie" has a long vowel sound as in /taɪ/. The "ie" in "tie" creates a diphthong, which is a combination of two vowel sounds. So, it is not considered a short vowel.
The A is a schwa (unstressed sound) and the OU has the ou/ow diphthong sound that is neither long or short.
No, the word "breeze" does not contain a long vowel. The "ee" in "breeze" represents a diphthong, which is a combination of two vowel sounds. The pronunciation of "breeze" has a short vowel sound.
It has neither. The OY has the oi/oy diphthong sound, as in boil and toy.
It is a long O vowel sound (and a silent E).
No. The vowel sound is the OI/OY pair, as in boy, join, point, and oyster. It is neither long or short.
The sound is considered neither long or short, as it is the OI/OY diphthong sound, as in boy and boil. (while the diphthong combines AW and IH, it has the same sound as long O-I-E)
In the word "coin," the vowel sound is considered a diphthong, which means it is a combination of two vowel sounds. The "oi" in "coin" creates a long vowel sound, similar to the sound in the word "boy." This diphthong is a combination of the /ɔɪ/ sounds, where the /ɔ/ is the long vowel sound.
The AI pair in 'hair' has a long A sound (a caret A due to the R).