Some sample words for the short vowel sounds are listed below:
a - cap
e - bet
i - kit
o - not
u - cut
If you want to make those words into words with long vowel sounds see this list:
a - cape
e - beet
i - kite
o - note
u - cute
You might notice that in each example an e was added to the word to make it a long vowel sound. Did you notice that the extra e in beet is not at the end of the word like the others? It works that way sometimes.
A, E, I, O, U are considered vowel sounds in the English language. Some sample words for each vowel sound are: A - "cat", E - "bed", I - "sit", O - "dog", U - "cup".
Assonance is the term for the repetition of vowel sounds in nearby words, whereas alliteration is the repetition of consonant sounds.
"Give" and "oddball" are not vowel words. Vowel words are words that contain a vowel as one of their main sounds. In "give," the main vowel sound is "i," a vowel; in "oddball," the main vowel sounds are "o" and "a," both vowels.
Initial vowel sound: apple, elephant, igloo Medial vowel sounds: banana, hello, tiger
Words with long vowel sounds often have a silent "e" at the end (e.g. "make"), a vowel-consonant-e pattern (e.g. "bike"), or a vowel digraph like "ai" or "ee" (e.g. "rain," "see"). Learning common long vowel patterns and practicing identifying them in words can help you figure out words with long vowel sounds.
The word is "assonance." It refers to the repetition of identical or similar vowel sounds in neighboring or in close words.
Vowel sounds connect and express the more numerous consonant sounds (which are the more specially shaped sounds) to create words. Vowel sounds are the oldest language sounds.
Consonance, as opposed to assonance of vowel sounds or alliteration of sounds at the beginning of words.
All words for vehicles have vowel sounds, if not vowels.
No, but in words ending in "W", it often sounds like a vowel.
present when the words have the same ending constant vowel sound but the vowel sounds are different (perch-porch)
Short vowel sound. Words such as ice and item are long I vowel sounds.
ressemblance of sound,especially of the vowel sounds in words,as in
The word "spinach" contains the vowel sounds /i/ and /ae/, like the "i" in "sit" and the "a" in "cat."
Repeated vowel sounds is assonance.Repeated consonant sounds (in a word or words) is consonance.The repetition of stressed consonants is called alliteration.
In English pronunciation, the vowel sounds in "love" (ʌ) and "move" (uː) are different. Specifically, "love" has the short vowel sound /ʌ/ as in "cup," while "move" has the long vowel sound /uː/ as in "food." Because the vowel sounds are not the same, these words do not rhyme.
There are many words, but one example is the word "father" in which the 'a' sounds like the 'o' in box.
The repetition of a vowel sound within words is called vowel harmony. It is a phenomenon where vowels within a word are influenced by each other and tend to follow a pattern of similarity or agreement in terms of features like frontness, backness, or roundedness.