Yes, the word "fly" has a vowel, which is the letter "y".
Yes, "fly" has a long vowel sound /aɪ/.
The Y has a long I vowel sound, as in sly and fry.
Yes, "fly" has a long vowel sound because the 'y' at the end of the word changes the 'i' to a long /ī/ sound.
No, "fly" does not contain a vowel as those are only "a," "e," "i," "o," and "u." The letter "y" in this context functions as a consonant.
The vowel sound in "dried" is /aɪ/. It is a diphthong sound formed by a combination of the 'ai' letters, and it is commonly found in words like "dried," "light," and "fly."
The Y in fly has a long I vowel sound, as do the words sly and my.
Yes, "fly" has a long vowel sound /aɪ/.
y
The Y has a long I vowel sound, as in flight.
No, "fly" does not contain a vowel as those are only "a," "e," "i," "o," and "u." The letter "y" in this context functions as a consonant.
The Y has a long I vowel sound, as in sly and fry.
The plural form of "boy" changes to "boys" by simply adding "s" at the end. The plural form of "fly" changes to "flies" by dropping the "y" and adding "ies" to maintain pronunciation.
"Red" and "Request" do not rhyme. They have to have the same vowel sounds, such as, "Pie" or "Fly."
One animal name without a "classic vowel" (AEIOU) is lynx(wildcat related to the bobcat).But in this case, the Y is a vowel.
There are many such works. For eg- crypt, fly, gypsy and many others.
Three but/ter/fly there should be a vowel in each syllables
Nope. The u is, though. Usually people only consider the y a vowel when it's a short word with no other vowels in it. For example: fly, shy, etc.