Yes, the OA in "roar" has a long O (rhotic O) as in forand oar.
A long vowel sound sounds like the letter name. The word "Zebra" consists of one long vowel sound; The "E," and one short vowel sound; The "A."
It has one long vowel (E) and one schwa sound.
Yes. Both have a long O (oh) vowel sound.
Yes. The OO has a long OO (long U) vowel sound. (zu)
The E has a long E sound. The A is a schwa or unstressed (uh) sound.
Yes. Both "for" and "roar" have a long O (the OA sounds like O in oar, boar, soar).
Yes, but the long O sound may be a caret O, because of the R. This is more important in British English where the R is not pronounced and roar sounds like raw.The same sound is heard in the rhyming words boar, bore, door, floor, and four.
No, "plain" does not have a long vowel sound. The vowel "a" in "plain" is pronounced as a short vowel sound.
No, "eat" does not have a long vowel sound. The vowel sound in "eat" is a short vowel sound.
Does Profile, have a long vowel sound or short vowel sound
No because it uses a log vowel sound
It has a long vowel sound.
The word "sail" has a long vowel sound. The vowel "a" in "sail" says its name, making it a long vowel sound.
The AY has a long A vowel sound.
The a in gave is a long vowel sound.
No, it has a short I vowel sound, as in him, shin, and twist.(The long I sound is in dime.)
No, the 'a' sound in "scale" is a short vowel sound. The long vowel sound for 'a' would be like in the word "cake".