A bell sound is typically spelled as "ding" or "dong."
The homograph for "bell sound" is "bell sound" - homographs are words that are spelled the same but may have different meanings or pronunciations.
No, "bell" and "flag" do not have the same vowel sound. "Bell" has the short 'eh' sound, while "flag" has the 'a' sound.
The word "bell" has a short vowel sound. The "e" in "bell" is pronounced as a short /ɛ/ sound, as in "bed" or "tell."
Yes, the letter "e" in "bell" represents a short vowel sound, not a long vowel sound.
The word 'bell' has the short e sound. The double consonant following the 'e' in bell gives a clue that it is the short e sound.
Yes. The E has a short E sound as in bell and tell.
The correct spelling for the plural noun is peels.The spelling peals is the sound of a bell ringing.
If you had read about Tinker Bell, you would know for a spell
A cow bell has a metallic clank sound to it. There are many sound clips and videos on YouTube that demonstrate the sound of a cow bell.
That is the correct spelling of "peeled" (remove outer layer, or skin from fruit).The sound-alike word is pealed (rang, as with a bell).
by the vibration of the whole bell , it makes a sound
The homograph for "bell sound" is "bell sound" - homographs are words that are spelled the same but may have different meanings or pronunciations.
the bell in a vacuum, in a vacuum there is nothing for the sound wave to move through
No, "bell" and "flag" do not have the same vowel sound. "Bell" has the short 'eh' sound, while "flag" has the 'a' sound.
The word "bell" has a short vowel sound. The "e" in "bell" is pronounced as a short /ɛ/ sound, as in "bed" or "tell."
Sound are produced by collition of molecules. When an object is beaten with bell. The molecule of metal bell moves and produces sound.
That is the correct spelling of the form "tolled" (as a bell ringing). However, the homophone (sound alike word) is "told" (past tense of to tell).