No
no
No atmospere or air on the moon, therefore no sound.
Neil Armstrong's left foot was the first to go on the moon.
Charles Duke (Apollo 16) was the youngest man to set his foot on the moon. He was born in 1935 and set his foot on the moon in 1972.
No scientists went to the moon , the men who flew to the moon were all asronauts.
Nothing, the moon doesn't sound like anything because there is no living force, or any force that can make sound on the moon.
The word "moon" has the same vowel sound as "tune."
No, "goodbye" has the diphthong /ʊ/ sound, while "soon" has the pure vowel /uː/ sound.
No, the word "mood" does not have a short vowel sound. The "oo" in "mood" represents a long vowel sound.
No. The word joy has the OI (oy) vowel sound, while moon has a long U (long OO).
The word soon has a long OO (long U) vowel sound, as in moon and soup.
No, "hum" does not have a short vowel sound. The "u" in "hum" makes a long vowel sound as in "soon" or "moon."
The word "fruit" has the "oo" vowel sound, as in "boot" or "moon".
No, "spoon" and "food" do not have the same vowel sound. The vowel sound in "spoon" is the 'oo' sound (/uː/), while the vowel sound in "food" is the 'oo' sound (/uː/).
Yes, the word "moon" has a long vowel sound for the 'oo' as in "moo".
The word JUICE has the same vowel sound (oo) as the word MOON. In US English, juice rhymes with moose and June rhymes with moon.
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The word duty has a long U (long OO) and a long E sound from the Y.