Australia, Mauritania, and Mauritius are examples of countries that contain two of the same vowel in a row in their name.
The vowel sound in "whale" is the same as the vowel sound in "think." Both words contain the long vowel sound /eɪ/.
Yes, "hide" and "ride" have the same vowel sound as they both contain the long vowel 'i' sound.
No, "came" and "rain" do not have the same vowel sound. In "came," the vowel sound is the long "a" sound /eɪ/, whereas in "rain," the vowel sound is the diphthong "ai" /eɪ/.
Yes, both "kite" and "while" contain the same diphthong vowel sound /aɪl/, even though they are spelled differently.
No, "smell" is not a long vowel word. A long vowel is a vowel sound that is pronounced the same way as the name of the vowel itself. In "smell," the "e" is pronounced with a short vowel sound.
When two words have the same vowel sound, it is known as assonance.
i'll say free
No, "came" and "rain" do not have the same vowel sound. In "came," the vowel sound is the long "a" sound /eɪ/, whereas in "rain," the vowel sound is the diphthong "ai" /eɪ/.
animal name that has the same vowel sound of apple.
Grimm, the name, is pronounced almost the same in Hebrew as it is in English, just with a longer vowel sound (greem)Grimm, the name, is pronounced almost the same in Hebrew as it is in English, just with a longer vowel sound (greem)
No, "hood" and "look" do not have the same vowel sound. "Hood" has the vowel sound /ʊ/ while "look" has the vowel sound /ʊ/ as in the word "book."
The animal is the sheep (long E vowel sound).
No. The A in name is a long A (ay) sound, i.e. it says its name. The A in can is a short A (ah as in cat).
Yes. The A has a long A sound as in name and same. The E is silent.
No. They share none of the same vowel sounds. The word afternoon has a short A, a schwa E (unstressed), and a long OO sound. The word donkey has either a short O or short U, and a long E sound.
Yes. The A has a long A sound as in name and same. The E is silent.
The word "birdie" has the same vowel sound as "dirty."