Not in most of North America. Canadian English generally retains /ɔ/ in the /ˈɔɹV/ environment. So Americans' sorry /ˈsɑɹi/, tomorrow /-ˈmɑɹoʊ/, borrow /ˈbɑɹoʊ/, horrible /ˈhɑɹɪbl/ have /ɔ/ here. There is a joke about Canadians' (and Brits') pronunciation of "I'm horribly sorry" [aɪm ˈhɔɹɪbli ˈsɔɹi] sounding like "I'm whore-ibly sore-y" to Americans.anteallach wrote: ↑Wed Oct 21, 2020 6:14 amI pronounce it with LOT, like Richard. My understanding is that in most of North America (but not parts of the eastern US) most words with LOT before /r/ are merged with NORTH and FORCE, but that there are a few exceptions; I gather "sorry" is often one of these exceptions but that it is not for you. Those exceptions I suppose retain the LOT vowel, but I assume it's the same phoneme as START (as we're not talking about eastern New England here).
And as Travis correctly points out, words with earlier /ˈo:ɹV/ tend to commonly have /ɔ/ in the western US, and as he says, /ˈoɹ/ among those few degenerates who still have the horse-hoarse distinction (*glances at linguoboy with near-closed eyes*), so in words like orange, Florida, oracle, authority, historical, while these same speakers have /ɑ/ in sorry and tomorrow. I think words with earlier /wɔɹ/ also tend to retain /ɔ/ in the west (warrant, quarrel) though? (as yet another of the many influences of /w/ on a following back vowel).
You could say the eastern US has a "sorry-orange" merger not found west of it, and that the US as a whole has a