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  • One of you reached out to me and said:

  • Rachel, will you make a video that goes over the pronunciation of O-O?

  • There are many different pronunciations.

  • Do you know them all?

  • Let’s learn them and practice them.

  • As we study the pronunciation of any given letter or set of letters,

  • we have to remember the sad fact that English is not phonetic.

  • That’s why spelling can be so tricky, and why pronunciation can be so hard.

  • A phonetic language is one where speech sounds,

  • like AH for example,

  • are written just one way.

  • But in English, the vowel sound AH

  • appears with many different spellings in different words:

  • The letter A like in FATHER.

  • The letter E like in SERGEANT.

  • Ah.

  • The Letter O like in BODY.

  • Ah.

  • The letters AA like in BAZAAR.

  • Ah.

  • The letters EA like in HEART.

  • Ah.

  • For example.

  • The same is true for letters.

  • Any letter, or set of letters like OO,

  • might have more than one pronunciation.

  • The most common pronunciation for the letter OO is the sound [u].

  • This happens in words likezoo’,

  • food’, ‘moon’, ‘loop’.

  • OO.

  • The lips are a bit relaxed, and then the come into a tighter circle.

  • OO.

  • I have a video that goes over the pronunciation of this sound,

  • including some close ups of the mouth.

  • This is in my Sounds of American English series, and

  • I’ll link to that video here and in the description below.

  • Another common pronunciation is the UH sound like inbook’,

  • cook’,

  • foot’,

  • hoodie’.

  • Uh, uh.

  • Notice the lips flare a bit for this sound.

  • Uh. Uh.

  • See an in-depth video on that sound by clicking here, or, you know what’s even better?

  • I’ll link to the playlist with ALL the sounds of American English at the end of this video.

  • Another pronunciation in some common words with O-O is the AW as in LAW sound.

  • For this sound, I’ve only found words where OO is followed by R,

  • and that does change the AW sound,

  • it makes it more round.

  • Let me show you what I mean.

  • Some common words here would bedoor’,

  • poor’, ‘floor’.

  • AW as in LAW is pronounced like this, AW, AW.

  • But in these words, the mouth closes more and the tongue pulls back a little bit more:

  • door, o-o, do-o- door,

  • aw, aw, law.

  • So the sound is more closed.

  • What about the wordsfloodandblood’?

  • What vowel sound do you hear there?

  • Flood, blood, bloody.

  • It’s the UH as in BUTTER sound.

  • So, a fourth sound.

  • Now, weve talked aboutfood’, ‘foot’, ‘floor’, andflood’.

  • In all of these words, O-O is pronounced differently.

  • Infood’, it’s OO.

  • Infoot’, it’s UH.

  • Infloor’, it’s AW,

  • infloodit’s UH.

  • Look at the four words.

  • Can you tell by looking which vowel sound it is?

  • What’s the clue?

  • How to do you know the pronunciation of the letters O-O by looking at a word?

  • Do you know the answer?

  • It’s a disappointing one.

  • There’s no way to know by looking at these words.

  • Really, the pronunciation of a word has to be memorized when you learn the definition of a new word.

  • I know. It’s extra work.

  • It’s one of the things that makes communicating in English, speaking English,

  • that much harder.

  • Food, foot, floor, flood.

  • There are even two more pronunciations,

  • though theyre not as frequent.

  • First, the wordcooperation’,

  • or, for short, you might see it ascoop’.

  • What’s interesting is that there, the two letters O

  • are actually in different syllables,

  • making two different sounds.

  • The first is the OH diphthong:

  • co- oh- oh-

  • and the second is the AH as in FATHER vowel.

  • OH-AH. OH-AH.

  • Co-op.

  • Co-op.

  • Occasionally youll see this written with a dash between these two syllables,

  • but often not.

  • Co-op.

  • This pronunciation is also in the wordzoology’,

  • where there is a syllable split between the two O’s.

  • OH-AH.

  • Zo-ology.

  • This one is funny because it’s related to the wordzoo’,

  • where the double O makes one sound,

  • the OO vowel.

  • Zoology, the study of animals,

  • zoo, a place where animals are kept.

  • Same root, different pronunciation of OO.

  • Also the O-O in the wordbrooch’.

  • The most common pronunciation for this in the US is with the OH as in NO diphthong.

  • OH, broo-, brooch.

  • A brooch is a piece of jewelry that you can pin to your shirt or jacket.

  • So weve gone over six pronunciations.

  • Let’s review.

  • Double O makes the OH diphthong like inbrooch.

  • It makes two sounds:

  • The OH diphthong plus the AH vowel, like incooperationorzoology’.

  • There are also four vowels that can be made with the double O:

  • Food, foot, floor, flood.

  • For these four, let’s go over more words for each category.

  • The UH as in BUTTER vowel:

  • Flood, blood,

  • and other words or compound words withblood’,

  • likebloodyorblood work’.

  • The AW as in LAW plus R:

  • Floor, oh-oh, floor,

  • door, anything withdoorlikedoorway’,

  • doormat’, ‘indoor’, ‘outdoor’.

  • Also, the wordpoor’, which is a homophone with this wordpour’, P-O-U-R,

  • like when you pour water out of a pitcher.

  • The UH as in PUSH vowel:

  • there are lots that end in K.

  • Book, cook, hook, look, took.

  • And any words that are variations or compound words,

  • like bookshelf, bookstore, bookworm,

  • bookmark, booking, books.

  • Cooking, cookbook.

  • Fishhook, unhook.

  • Looks, looking, lookout.

  • Mistook, undertook.

  • We havefootand related words like:

  • football, barefoot, foothill.

  • Good, hood, wood, and related words like:

  • goodbye,

  • lots of words that end inhood like neighborhood, boyhood,

  • girlhood, adulthood.

  • We have woods, woodpecker, woodcutter,

  • plywood, redwood, hardwood.

  • Uh.

  • We have brook, booger, cookie.

  • And the most common pronunciation, the OO vowel like in: too,

  • boot, cool, moon,

  • mood, boom, doom,

  • food, goofy, fool,

  • hoop, loop, noon, oops,

  • ooze, roof, soon,

  • cartoon, bloom, aloof,

  • boost, booze, broom, hoop,

  • moose, proof, scoop, shoot,

  • stoop, bamboo, Google, goose.

  • I hope this video has helped clarify what's going on with the letters O-O.

  • You have several different pronunciations,

  • but weve gone over a lot of the most common words with OO in this video.

  • Were any of the pronunciations different from what you thought?

  • It might not be a bad idea to watch the video again

  • to solidify the words for each pronunciation.

  • Also, here’s that playlist I promised you.

  • It has a video for each sound in American English.

  • That, of course, includes the possible pronunciation of O-O that you learned today.

  • As you go forward speaking English,

  • think to yourself,

  • I am now the master of the letters OO.

  • That’s it, and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English.

One of you reached out to me and said:

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