Vyne<<<< with a y sound for the i
Yes, the silent E at the end of the word "vine" causes the I to have a long I sound.
It is pronounced Vine lynn. NOT Vin lin, or especially Vine land.
The English word fruit is written the same in French: un fruit (masculine noun) - pronounced fru-ee.The word 'fruit' means the same in French as in English.
Vine is monosyllabic.
I think it's pronounced "BOW-der-wayne."
Vinyl is pronounced as "vai-nl."
Irvine is pronounced as "ER-vine," with the emphasis on the first syllable. The "Ir" sounds like the "er" in "her," and the "vine" rhymes with "line."
Yes, the word vine is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a plant, a thing.
He swung from the vine, then dropped into the lake.
The Latin word for "vine" is vitis (-is, f.), which is the source of the modern word for grape-growing, "viticulture".
Yes, it is. (vine = La vigne...When you say "la", this is feminine)
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