i find r resonating itself with the vowel sound therefore i feel it could be half vowel.
No, R-controlled vowels do not have long vowel sounds. When a vowel is followed by the letter "r," the "r" affects the pronunciation and changes the sound of the vowel. Examples include "ar," "er," "ir," "or," and "ur."
The U is followed by an R, which makes it an R-controlled U (ur, short U + R).
Consonants in "after" are f, t, and r. The vowel is a.
It has a short A vowel sound (haff) to rhyme with calf and laugh.
“Grew” is a verb, not a vowel or consonant. It consists of the consonants “g”, “r”, and “w”, with the vowel “e” in the middle.
R is not a vowel.
it is a vowel that u can only hear the "R" sound
it is never a vowel genius.
No, R-controlled vowels do not have long vowel sounds. When a vowel is followed by the letter "r," the "r" affects the pronunciation and changes the sound of the vowel. Examples include "ar," "er," "ir," "or," and "ur."
The U is followed by an R, which makes it an R-controlled U (ur, short U + R).
Consonants in "after" are f, t, and r. The vowel is a.
It has a short A vowel sound (haff) to rhyme with calf and laugh.
The A with the R is a special vowel (umlaut A) but the Y has a long E vowel sound.
the silent vowel in February is the r between b and u
“Grew” is a verb, not a vowel or consonant. It consists of the consonants “g”, “r”, and “w”, with the vowel “e” in the middle.
All three words . . . -- include the letters 'R' and 'M', and at least one vowel -- end in 'R' - [vowel] - 'M' -- end in [vowel] - 'M' -- end in 'M'
No. The I is a long I but the E is a schwa sound, not a R-controlled vowel.