"i" in time
Yes, "ea" is considered a diphthong in the English language.
Yes, "ou" is considered a diphthong in English.
In English month names, none.
a diphthong, employed in the Latin language, and thence in the English language, as the representative of the Greek diphthong oi. In many words in common use, e alone stands instead of /. Classicists prefer to write the diphthong oe separate in Latin words.
The vowel in "strain" is the diphthong "ai," which sounds like "ay" in English.
A diphthong is a combination of a strong vowel and a weak vowel, or two weak vowels to make one syllable or sound. The English "long" vowels a, i, and o are diphthongs, having the IPA designation ei, ai and ou respectively.
In some languages, including older English, two adjacent vowels in a word that are pronounced as a single vowel sound are written with a special typographical character called a "diphthong" that incorporates parts of both single vowels.
No, the word "sound" is not a diphthong. It is a monophthong, as it contains a single vowel sound, represented by the 'ou' diphthong in this case.
More or less like the English words "louse DAY-oh", with no diphthong on the "ay" vowel.
1 syllable 3 phonemes (one is a diphthong)
There are two syllables in Haiti. The ai is a diphthong.
One syllable. Different dialects may accentuate the diphthong in this word so that it sounds like two syllables (why-yold). However, a diphthong is a moving monosyllabic sound. Thus, English dictionaries will show it as one syllable.