Yes, "sew" contains the vowel "e."
Yes, "sew" has a long vowel sound because it follows the vowel-consonant-e pattern where the final "e" makes the preceding vowel say its name.
No, "sew" is not considered a long "o" word. In the English language, a long "o" sound is typically represented by the vowel in words like "go" or "bone."
The homonym of "sew" is "so." They are pronounced the same but have different meanings.
Various spellings in words include: no beau/bow row dough flow/floe woe hoe sew/sow owe
A homonym for "sew" is "so," which sounds the same but has a different meaning.
Yes, "sew" has a long vowel sound because it follows the vowel-consonant-e pattern where the final "e" makes the preceding vowel say its name.
sew.
"There are 2 consonants in sew, as 's' and 'w' are consonants and 'e' is a vowel. 'A' 'E' 'I' 'O' and 'U' are vowels, and every other letter in the English language is a consonant." Actually, the word "sew" has only one consonant: s. When the letter "w" ends a word after following a vowel (or in other places where it forms a "diphthong"), the "w" is technically a vowel.
The word sew starts with a soft c sound and ends with a round vowel. It rhymes with so, dough, and grow. It does not sound like sue, lieu, or blew.
The letter 'w' is often used like a vowel, sometimes more obviously than others:two (obvious!)sew (pronounced so-oo)
No, "sew" is not considered a long "o" word. In the English language, a long "o" sound is typically represented by the vowel in words like "go" or "bone."
Sew Fast Sew Easy was created in 1991.
The word "sew" is a verb, not a noun. There is no plural for sew.
The homonym of "sew" is "so." They are pronounced the same but have different meanings.
no, cotton is easy to sew
Yes, as in to sew material or buttons.
how do i create a braidless sew-in?