There are many words with double oo`s in them.Noodles,doodles,poodles also moon tool tooth broom
igloo
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shampoo
The long vowel U has the "oo" or "ew"sound in US English, generally "ew" in the UK. Words with a silent E (oo) : clue, due, sue Words with a silent E (ew) : cue, hue, juice Words with a consonant E (oo): rude, lute, truce, Words with aconsonant E (ew): cube, cute, huge, abuse, use (the function) Words with the long U (oo): tutor, hula, lunar Words with the long U (ew) : pupil, mucilage
There are many words with double oo`s in them.Noodles,doodles,poodles also moon tool tooth broom
No, it is a "long OO" sound (double O as in moon).Some words with O, U, OU are pronounced with OO : to, dune, souvenir
"Double letters" means two in a row, like tt in "letter" or oo, kk, and ee in "bookkeeper".
boo Some words that end in "oo" are igloo, goo, poo, and too.
The words lose, prove, and move (and words based on them) have the long OO sound.
It never sounds like "you" because the double oo sound has no y-glide.
oocyte
blood
words that have the long oo sound are wood, took, too, noon, good, root, book, wool, and food.
The OO pair is a digraph. It could only be considered a diphthong when it is "short." The long OO is a single sound like other long vowels. The pair can also rarely have the sound of a short U (blood). The long sound is the OO sound (cool, moon, boot) and the same as some words with a long U (dune, flute, rule) that have no yoo sound. The short OO is an oo-ah sound as in book, good, and foot, also made by O in wolf and by OU in could and should.
The answer is flood thx bye Emily
In Australian dialect, the double "o" sound in "look" is often pronounced as a longer "oo" sound, similar to the "oo" in "book" or "took."