The vowel sound in boy is spelled either u or oi.
The vowel sound in "boy" is spelled with the letters "o" and "y". It is a diphthong sound, represented by the letters "oy" in this case.
The vowel sound in "boy" is the diphthong /ɔɪ/. It is a combination of two vowel sounds, /ɔ/ and /ɪ/.
Some words that have the same vowel sound as "boy" include joy, toy, coy, and deploy.
It has neither. The OY has the oi/oy diphthong sound, as in boil and toy.
No, the vowel sound in "joy" is a diphthong, which is a combination of two vowel sounds.
Yes, "boy" is a short vowel word because the "o" makes a short /ɔ/ sound.
The vowel sound in "boy" is the diphthong /ɔɪ/. It is a combination of two vowel sounds, /ɔ/ and /ɪ/.
Some words that have the same vowel sound as "boy" include joy, toy, coy, and deploy.
It has neither. The OY has the oi/oy diphthong sound, as in boil and toy.
No, the vowel sound in "joy" is a diphthong, which is a combination of two vowel sounds.
Yes, "boy" is a short vowel word because the "o" makes a short /ɔ/ sound.
Some words with the same vowel sound as "join" are coin, boy, foil, and point.
The correct usage is "a boy." The article "a" is used before words that begin with a consonant sound, while "an" is used before words that begin with a vowel sound. Since "boy" begins with a consonant sound (the "b" sound), "a" is the appropriate article to use.
Yes. Whenever Y makes a vowel sound (I, E) or a diphthong (boy, soybean), it is acting as a vowel. When it appears before a vowel and makes the "yuh" sound, it is a consonant.Some definitions consider the "silent Y" to also be a consonant (day, obey), because in words such as player, the "yuh" sound is heard.
Yes. It is considered a vowel here because, rather than merely influencing the vowel sound (day, obey), it creates the diphthong sound "oi." The vowels are a, e, i o and u and sometimes y and w.
The two vowel sounds in "boy" are /ɔɪ/, which is a diphthong consisting of the sounds /ɔ/ as in "morn" and /ɪ/ as in "sit".
No. The OY pair has an OI sound as in boy, which sounds like O-I-E. This sound is considered neither long or short although it contains these long sounds.The -ous has a schwa or unstressed uhs sound.
Some words that have the same vowel sound as "oil" include boil, foil, toil, and soil.