That is called consonance. Consonance is the repetition of consonant sounds at the end of words in close proximity.
Consonant variants are consonants having 2 or more sounds.Example:c- /s/ cereal, ceremony/k/ calculator, candle
was it called Ludo? I remember having that game as a child and it was similar to Bingo.
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Words having the same, or very similar meanings are called synonyms.
These are words where the letter Y is a vowel or in a vowel pair.Words ending in consonant-Yby, cry, dry, fry, my, pry, shy, spry, try, whyWords having or ending in UYbuy, guy,Words containing consonant-YExamples: byline, cyberspace, cytology, dye, gyrate, hygiene, lye, lyre, nylon, pyrite, rye, type, zygoteThe -ing form of -ie words (avoids 2 I's)dying, lying, tying, vying
the measure defferent between consonat and vowel is pronounced and all consonant having a single type sound while vowel can produce different type sound
The vowel in "buzz' is a schwa, neither "long" nor "short" (inadequate terms to describe English vowels). Whether the syllable having a schwa vowel is long or short itself depends on whether its final consonant is voiced or unvoiced, respectively. Having the voiced zz for a final consonant, buzz is long syllable.
Having two similar alleles for a trait is called being homozygous. It is possible to be homozygous for a dominant or recessive trait.
In "Spark" by Alice Broadway, the ending sees the protagonist, Lei, coming to terms with her past and embracing her identity and strengths. She finds closure and a sense of new beginnings while also having a better understanding of the world around her.
fraction having a common denominator
generally speaking, in English, words with the short 'i' sound can be recognized by the fact of having two consonants immediately after the letter 'i'. viz: fir (short 'i'), vs fire (long 'i') almost always of the form: (consonant, 'i', consonant, consonant) Thus: firm, firmament, gird, girder, hilt, filter, and so on. Also, the letter 'i' followed by a final consonant is always the short sound. viz: clip, grip, slip, hip, lip, rip, sip, tip, and so on.