tomato
dorito
potato
cheerio
piano
Pinocchio
antipasto
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.
It has a long O (oh) sound, as in no and so.
spelling slow do it a long o sound
The open long sound for the letter "o" is typically represented by the phonetic symbol /oʊ/. It is commonly heard in words like "go" and "home."
Both O sounds in hydrophone are the long O (oh) sound. The first instance is seen in the words pyromania, gyroscope, and cryogenic. The second instance in the words bone, stone, and alone. The long O appears in several spellings: - words with an O (go, comb, cold) - words with an O with a silent E (code, hole) - words with an OE (doe, foe) - words with OUGH (dough, though) - words with OW (flow, mow, row)
The word go has a long O vowel sound (oh).
The O in stole is a long O (oh) and the E is silent. The long O sound usually comes from O words, OA words, OLL and OLD words, and some OW words. Examples are go, no, bone, tote, hole, toll, cold, loan, toad, float, and slow.
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 long o sound typically sounds like "oh" as in words like "go" or "home." It is a vowel sound that is produced with a tense tongue position and a more open mouth shape.
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.