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6.3.4 Strong and weak GA /oʊ/

GA /oʊ/ begins as a half-open to mid back vowel, and ends as a half-close, centralized back vowel.
The Dutch vowel /oˑ/ starts further back and ends in a closer position than the GA vowel. Also, depending on how you pronounce the Dutch vowel, the GA vowel may be more open.

 

Some words containing strong /oʊ/:
• go, open, smoke, yolk /joʊk/, comb /koʊm/, envelope, hotel
• coat, toast, road
• show, row, know
• soul, although
• toe, Joe
• sew
 (unusual spelling)

 

Weak GA /oʊ/ tends to be monophthongal, and may shade off toward a central quality ([ə]). On the analogy of the symbols /i/ and /u/, it would have been a good idea to write /o/ for weak /oʊ/, but the LPD does not have it, and we will follow that work here.

 

Some words with weak /oʊ/:
• window, fellow, follow, hollow
• tomato, potato, lotto, motto, Mephisto
• November, notation, momentous

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An Introduction to American English Phonetics Copyright © by Ton Broeders and Carlos Gussenhoven is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.