awe is pronounced identically to ah. It is not pronounced awah.
In YOUR dialect, yes. Not right, not wrong ... a variant.Can't believe people aren't grasping the equivocality here, and insisting on some kind of nonexistant standard.
Perhaps you're not grasping that, while I fully understand the dialecticity of your wordology, I don't speak some dialect of English. I treat this language as something to be revered, not something spoken in Revere. I fully appreciate aspects of different dialiects - I think y'all is really no different from the indefinite pronoun you, but I appreciate the ability to distinguish "y'all" from "all y'all", and am willing to use the phrase in a group that would understand it. I find it fascinating that people warsh their clothes in more than one area of the country, but I don't participate, because it sounds like you're turning the key in an engine that's already started. And more importantly, I understand and can fully hear the sound made by people who say "aw" different from "ah" or a soft "o", but I don't choose to join people who mistakenly use the English language by trying to force sounds with completely different etimologies into a set of rules for a language that already has too many. We're a melting pot, not a melting pawt, and the Englishification of words should merge pronunciations into correct and common sounds. There is no functional difference or aesthetic beauty in a separate "aw" sound. There are dialects that refuse to move to proper English, and other dialects that continue to diverge from proper English, but I refuse to believe that the horrendous whiny "aw" sound is part of the English language I speak, and I find it outright offensive when people like Aaron pretend that my ears are broken because I supposably can't hear the cheese grater on chalkboard sound of him saying "doe-uhn" instead of dawn and awuh instead of awe, when he refuses to admit that those are the malformed sounds coming out of his own damn mouth.