Roosevelt
Not a single word, that I can think of, has double o's that sound like a single o.
In Australian dialect, the double "o" sound in "look" is often pronounced as a longer "oo" sound, similar to the "oo" in "book" or "took."
A long vowel sound means that the "name of the vowel" is heard. So a long O is where the sound "oh" is heard, as in go, grow, toe, coal, bone, or fold.
No, "oppose" has a long "o" sound, pronounced as /oʊ/. The short "o" sound is typically found in words like "hot" or "top."
Yes, the word "pole" has a short o sound in standard English pronunciation. It is similar to the o sound found in words like "hot" or "job."
Yes. Both "for" and "roar" have a long O (the OA sounds like O in oar, boar, soar).
In Australian dialect, the double "o" sound in "look" is often pronounced as a longer "oo" sound, similar to the "oo" in "book" or "took."
A long vowel sound means that the "name of the vowel" is heard. So a long O is where the sound "oh" is heard, as in go, grow, toe, coal, bone, or fold.
No. Words with a double L have an AW sound (caret O) for the A, so that all is a homophone for "awl." The short A sound is heard in words such as pal and gallon.
No, "oppose" has a long "o" sound, pronounced as /oʊ/. The short "o" sound is typically found in words like "hot" or "top."
O sound words : door, floor, and in some dialects poor(US homophone is pour, not pore).
there is a double 'o' in the word moon. say, spoon has double 'o's therefore making the long o sound.
Yes, the word "pole" has a short o sound in standard English pronunciation. It is similar to the o sound found in words like "hot" or "job."
Yes. Both "for" and "roar" have a long O (the OA sounds like O in oar, boar, soar).
No, it is a "long OO" sound (double O as in moon).Some words with O, U, OU are pronounced with OO : to, dune, souvenir
The words lose, prove, and move (and words based on them) have the long OO sound.
Pottu is pronounced as "po-too." The 'o' is pronounced like the 'o' in the word 'hot' and the 'u' sound is like in the word 'too.' The 'tt' is pronounced as a double 't' sound.
The letter A can sound like 'o' when it follows a W. Here are some examples:quadruplesquashswallowswampswanswarmswashwandwantwanderwarmwarthogwashwatchwaterwhat