Do "one" and "none" rhyme for you?
They are rhyming pairs for me - rhyming with "gone".
Some people, however, rhyme them both with "done". I have also noticed, more peculiarly, that some people rhyme "one" with "gone", but "none" with "done".
At least here those are:
"one" : ["wV~:n]
"none" : ["nV~:n]
"done" : ["dV~:n]
but:
"gone" : ["gQ~:n]
One, none and gone all rhyme for me, but done doesn't.
I have "wun", "nun", "dun".
But "gon".
"one" /wQn/
"none" /nQn/
"gone" /gQn/
"shone" /SQn/
"scone" /skQn/
These all rhyme.
"done" /dUn/
This doesn't.
For me, "one" rhymes with "none" and "done",
one ["wVn]
none ["nVn]
done ["dVn]
but not with "gone".
["gQ:n]
Pronouncing "one" with /Q/ is a characteristic of some dialects in England (especially Northern England, I think).
For me "one" & "none" rhyme with "done" not "gone" with which "shone" & "scone" rhyme. Does anyone rhyme "shone" &/or "scone" with "cone"?
>>For me "one" & "none" rhyme with "done" not "gone" with which "shone" & "scone" rhyme. Does anyone rhyme "shone" &/or "scone" with "cone"?<<
I myself rhyme "shone", "scone", and "cone":
"shone" : ["So~:n]
"scone" : ["sko~:n]
"cone" : ["k_ho~:n]
I say "one" and "none" the same (with the same vowel as in the word "but") but "gone" I pronounce as in "hot."
I figured this is how most people would pronounce them... Guess I was quite wrong...
I also rhyme "shone", "scone", and "cone":
shone ["S7Un]
scone ["sK7Un]
cone ["k_h7Un]
And to add to this list of words, how do you pronounce the adjective "wont" (as in, "to be wont to do something")? I pronounce it as ["w7Unt], homophonous with "won't", and not with "want". This, I've read, is the more common pronunciation in England, and I think I picked it up from my mother, who spent a lot of time in England as a child.
one [wVn]
none [nVn]
done [dVn]
gone [gAn]
scone [skAn]
shone [SAn]
cone [kon]
wont [wAn?]
One, none, and done all rhyme; gone is the odd one out. Gone
Scone, cone, and shone all rhyme for me, and wont and want sound the same.
For me, one, none and done all sound the same, gone doesn't.
Scone rhymes with shone and con but not cone. Wont and want don't really rhyme either, though they sound very similar.
Scone is an odd one. In most (but not all) of Northern England it is pronounced to rhyme with "stone", but in other areas (especially the South) it rhymes with "gone".
As for "shone", I've never heard it pronounced differently anywhere- it's always "shQn"!
I think the main differences in England are between East and West, for example, one is usually pronounced as nVn in Yorkshire (East), but nQn in Lancashire (West). I have noticed that some people in the South East, however, will say wQn, but nVn. This makes no sense whatsoever given that none just means "not one".