Hello. This is Gill at engVid, and today we have a lesson on the pronunciation of words
containing the letters "o-w". Okay? So, there are two different ways of pronouncing these
words, and some are pronounced both ways and spelt the same, but they mean different things;
there are other words which are only pronounced in one way, and not the other. So, let's just
have a look at these examples. Okay.
So, "o-w" in the word, it's either the vowel sound: "a-oo", which I've spelt: "a-o-o",
"a-oo", like when somebody hits you, you say: "Ow! Ow, that hurt. Ow." Or at least in English
we say it that way. Okay. So: "a-oo" is one of the pronunciations. And: "oh", like when
you're surprised: "Oh. Oh. I didn't know that. Oh." So: "oh" is the other vowel sound. Okay.
So, first of all, let's look at the three words where there are both. So: "a-oo", you
can have: "bow" and you can have: "bow". So, "bow" is when you go like this. You sort of
bend over politely: "bow". Usually men do that. "Bow". But there's also something called
a "bow", which is if you have a ribbon in your hair or something like that, and you
tie it in a bow; you do this. Or if you have shoes with laces, you tie your shoelaces in
a bow. Okay, so we have: "bow", "ba-oo", and "bow". Right. Okay.
Next one: "row" and "row". So, a "row" is a lot of noise. "Oh, there's a row going on
out there. That's noisy. People are shouting. There's a row." It could be an argument between
people: "They're having a row." The neighbours next door, you can hear their voices, they're
having a row; they're disagreeing about something, so that's "row". But "row" is either when
things are in lines, like that, that's a line or a row; or you can also... If you're in
a boat with oars like this, you row; you row the boat. You're doing this with the wooden
oars to get through the water, to move through the water. That's also to row the boat, and
Next one: "sow" and "sow". So, a "sow" is a female pig; that's pretty much the only
meaning for it - a female pig is a sow. Okay. To "sow", s-o-w is to put seeds in the ground
for them to grow. So, you can link "sow" with "grow", if it helps you remember - put the
seeds in the soil, they will grow. Sow the seeds, they will grow. It's not the same as
this spelling of "sew", "s-e-w", which is with a needle and thread. If I'm sewing on
a button which has come off, that's "sew" with an "e", so it's not that; but it's the
Right. So those are the three pairs which have both pronunciations. And then we have
two lists of words which just have one. So, the "a-oo" vowel sound, we have: "brow", which
is the same as your forehead; is your brow. And you've got "eyebrows". These are eyebrows
"Cow", the animal that you get milk from. The cow. "How? How do you do something? How?"
"Now", at this moment; now. "Plow", this is the American spelling; the English spelling
is slightly different, but it's the same pronunciation. We spell it, in the U.K.: "p-l-o-u-g-h", but
the American spelling is "plow" - "p-l-o-w". So, that's another one. To plow a field; to
churn up the soil - again, maybe if you're sowing seeds in agriculture. Okay. So, the
plow is the equipment that you use to cut into the soil; often pulled by horses, or
it may be a tractor or something with an engine nowadays. Okay. "Plow".
This word: "pow" is a sort of, like a comic book. "Pow", "pow", when people hit each other.
You get this "pow". It sort of represents the sound of someone being hit or something
exploding, that sort of thing. Okay. "Prow" is the front of a ship. The prow of a ship.
And "vow" is another word for a promise; to vow to do something is to promise to do something.
Okay. So those are the "a-oos", there.
And then the "oh" list, from here: a "crow" is a bird; a big, black bird. "Crow". "Flow",
"flow". Water flows; liquid flows. "Flow". "Glow" is to do with light shining. We have
a lot of lights here today which are glowing quite brightly; lighting us all up. So that's
"glow". Or you can have a fire burning, and it creates a kind of a red glow. So, anything
"Grow", when you put the seeds in the ground and they grow. Okay. "Know", to know something.
"Low" is down here; the opposite of high - "low". "Mow", another agricultural word; or in your
own garden, if you have grass - the grass grows. You have to cut it, so you mow the
grass; you cut it to a low level to keep it tidy. So: "to mow the grass", "mow the lawn",
and you have a machine called a "lawnmower". Okay.
"Slow", the opposite of quick; "slow". And "tow", "t-o-w" is if a car has broken down
and you have to get it to the garage for repairing somehow, somebody can tow it for you. They
will tie a rope to it from their own vehicle, and pull it behind to take it to the garage
where it can be repaired. So that's to tow a car-okay-to pull it along with a rope because
maybe the engine isn't working or you've run out of petrol; something like that.
Okay, so they we are - the two pronunciations: "a-oo" and "oh". And I hope also this has
helped to expand your vocabulary. And so, if you'd like to go to the website: www.engvid.com,
there's a quiz there for you to do, connected with this lesson. And hope to see you again