Ado, hello, Toto, Bobo, dodo, go, ho-ho-ho (Santa's big line), Io (an English band), Jo, lo (as in 'and behold!'), Mo (nickname) no, so, to, yo, and zoo are all English words ending with an 'o'.
In US English, words such as for, door, floor, and core are usually pronounced as a long O + R, rather than the or/aw sound in British English.
In German it is called an "umlaut", and it affects the way the vowel is pronounced. For example, an "O" with an umlaut over it is pronounced like double "O" in English. Thus: Flote (with an umlaut over the "o") is pronounced "Flute" in English.
There are no commonly used words in English where the letter "o" is silent. However, there may be some words borrowed from other languages, like "doux" in French, where the "x" is pronounced instead of "ou".
In the word "poisonous," the letter "o" is silent. The "o" is not pronounced, and the word is pronounced as "POY-zuh-nus." The silent "o" is a common feature in English words, where certain letters are not pronounced but still affect the word's spelling and meaning.
Cearbhall O Dalaigh is pronounced in English as "Carval O'Daly." The name can be broken down with "Cearbhall" sounding like "Carval," and "O Dalaigh" pronounced as "O'Daly." The pronunciation may vary slightly based on regional accents, but this is the most common English approximation.
It is pronounced the same as the o in the English language but held out longer.
"O del mio amato ben" is an Italian song title, pronounced as "Oh del mee-oh ah-mah-toh ben." Each syllable is enunciated clearly, with emphasis on the vowels. The "o" is pronounced like the English "oh," "del" sounds like "dell," and "ben" is pronounced like "ben" in English.
In US English, the O is a long O with an R as in hoarse, course, and force. This is considered a 'caret O' (OR/AW) sound because these words are pronounced as AW in non-rhotic British English (hawse).
type in words that start with O it will give you lots of words that start with O and just put it in a list!
The first o in god is pronounced kind of like the o in the word looter. The a in dag is pronounced kind of like the a in the word walruss.
every time you see the letter'a' its pronounced a as in car'e' its pronounced e as in egg'i' its pronounced i as in kiss'o' its pronounced o as in orange'u' its pronounced u as in suitall other sounds are constenants and are pronounced the same as English with the exception of 'r' which sounds more like 'l'