display, gainsay, mayday,
The second syllable is a long O sound (oh), the same as low.Depending on the stressed syllable, the word hello can rhyme with fellow, yellow and Jell-o.
Words that "rhyme" are those with an end rhyme, where the last vowel sound, or the last vowel-and-consonant syllable, have the same sound. Vowel rhymes : lie/sigh/my (all sound like a long I) Syllable rhymes : led/dead, pale/pail/bale/bail, moan/tone/own with D, L, N respectively
Yes, it is a long OO sound, as in "Joon" to rhyme with noon and soon.
The word "suit" has a long OO sound, to rhyme with boot and shoot.
No. It has a short U (uhm) sound for the first syllable.
No. It is a short I sound, to rhyme with bin and win.The long I would sound like the first syllable of china.
The second syllable is a long O sound (oh), the same as low.Depending on the stressed syllable, the word hello can rhyme with fellow, yellow and Jell-o.
The long "y" sound is the same as the long "i" sound. The words "my" and "rhyme" have this sound.
Compound words with the long A sound:birthday (2nd syllable has the long A sound)heyday (both words have long A)mailbox (first syllable = long A)payday (both syllables have the long A sound)playmate (both syllables have the long A sound)stalemate (both syllables have the long A sound)tailgate (both syllables have the long A sound)
Words that "rhyme" are those with an end rhyme, where the last vowel sound, or the last vowel-and-consonant syllable, have the same sound. Vowel rhymes : lie/sigh/my (all sound like a long I) Syllable rhymes : led/dead, pale/pail/bale/bail, moan/tone/own with D, L, N respectively
The E has a short E sound; the first syllable should rhyme with tell. However, the ending Y has a long E sound.
No, the words "guts" and "cops" do not rhyme. "Guts" has a short vowel sound, while "cops" has a long vowel sound.
Typical examples are ice, ire, hype, dine, bite, pile, ripe, rhyme, and size. *There is a long list of mostly one-syllable words at the related question.
Almost any words that truly rhyme with white would have the long I sound, since white has that same sound, and rhyme is based on pronunciation. So, these words should rhyme, with a long I sound: bite fight height kite light might night right rite sight site tight wight Even byte, with a y, has the same sound, but wasn't sure if you wanted just ones that have an I in them, so played it safe.
Yes. The sound is a long O, to rhyme with other -old words such as bold and cold.
No. The word "bit" has a short I sound, to rhyme with fit and sit.The long I is seen in the words bite and bight.
The word 'meadow' has a short E sound in the first syllable. It also has a long O sound in the second syllable. Some examples of other words where the EA pair have the short e sound are bread, death, and sweat. However, most words with EA together do have a long e sound. For example, the words bead and meal have a long E sound.