over, oval, ovum, ogre, open, occasion, occasionally, omen, ovation, okapi, own, owner, okay, opaque, ovary, obey, oat, Irish last names:eg. O'Brien, ocean, only
In the English language, there are no words in which the combination of two vowels make the sound of another vowel. In some cases, it may occur with names or places that have foreign pronunciations.
sought, bought brought
spelling slow do it a long o sound
The "oa" combination typically makes a long "o" sound, as in words like "boat," "coat," and "road." This vowel pair is often found in the middle or at the end of words. It is pronounced as a single sound, similar to the "o" in "go."
The letter "o" in the word "some" makes the "uh" sound due to its placement in the word and the influence of the surrounding letters. The "e" at the end of the word is silent, so the "o" is pronounced with a short "u" sound.
Toad would be the correct answer out of the three words. :)
It is a long O sound, as in the rhyming words ghost and post. Other words use OA for the long O sound: boast, roast, and toast.
The O in cost has an AW sound (caret O), as in law and lost. The AW sound is also heard in O words such as off and long, and A words such as ball and call.
The noun project has a short O sound (as opposed to the long O of the verb). Words with a similar "oj" (odg) sound are dodge and progeny. Words with a short O sound include rob, body, lock, shot, and flop.
The letters OA make the long O sound in goal
Wild Colt words: words with i and o followed by two consonants --the vowels make the long sound (example: blind and cold).
Yes. Both "for" and "roar" have a long O (the OA sounds like O in oar, boar, soar).