>>25039937Oh, and here's another thing about the way english actually sounds.
You're adding an extra vowel without realizing it.
Poukiman (American) Poukimon (British)
a= ah
i= ee
u=oo
The 'long' O is actually a diphthong of O + U, and if you ever learn a language cut your O short before it reaches that U. There is a short O but varies on the dialect.
Most American dialects lack this sound and just replace it with Ah / A and so they pronounce caught exactly like cot. However, like the example with E, the short O shows up for every English speaker when paired with certain consonants. In this case it's L and R. The examples would be Or and Old. If you listen carefully it sounds different from the diphthong of go which is a 'long' O.
TL;DR you're not speaking a language that pronounces anything normally in comparison to other major languages. So it doesn't matter.