i don't because i put it on there
The contraction is I'm (capital i). It is pronounced to rhyme with time.
No, we use expansion and contraction to tell temperature(thermometer).
He'd, we'd, and she'd rhyme with agreed.
The contraction I'd (I did, I would) is pronounced like eyed, to rhyme with side.
The contraction form of "I have" is I've (pronounced to rhyme with hive).It is rarely used alone (I've an appointment) rather than with another verb (I've seen that).
be, free, fee, agree, key, lea, me, knee, see, tree, whee
Flee Free Agree Tree Three
it's a contraction of over , pronounced oar as in boat, used only by poets and other mad Englishmen.
To get a true rhyme, you would have to use two syllables, and a similar emphasis pattern. The only one that I can think of off the top of my head would be "agree," but you could also just end rhyme, or use two words to rhyme.Here are some words that rhyme with the last syllable of degree:beeceedeefeegeeheekeyleemekneepeeseeseateeteaveeweeyezfleabebcdegfleefreegleeheleamippeapleasheskispreetheethreetreevwe
Cody and macaroni are not exact rhymes, but are close enough you could probably use them in a poem. An exact rhyme would be Cody and macarodi, but of course "macarodi" is not a real word. Yeah i agree with that answer, its a slant rhyme, where two words are not exact rhymes but still sound similar. Shakespeare used these all the time.
There is no contraction for were you. There is no contraction for you were.There is a contraction for "you are" (you're).
The pronunciation is with a single short A sound (mam), to rhyme with gram and ham.The word ma'am is a contraction of "madam" (polite term of address for a woman, from the French madame).