pitter patter
pitterpatter
No, the word "feet" does not have a short e sound. It is pronounced with a long e sound.
Yes, the word "feet" has a long e sound, like the letter "e" in "bee" or "see."
The word "feet" has a short vowel sound. The "ee" in "feet" makes the short /iː/ sound, as in "sit" or "bit".
The i sound in the word little is a short vowel.
The word "feet" has a long vowel sound. The letter "e" in "feet" makes the sound of the letter's name, which is a long E sound.
i dun no but it dont makes sense
Yes. The EE pair has a long E sound, as in meet and greet.
It is a long E vowel sound, as in sheet, beat, and heat.
you use onomatopoeia to give the word sound. by give i mean it is already there. lets take the word flopped. Jim flopped on the bed. the onomatopoeia if flopped because flopped has a little bit of sound with it. now that i said a little bit of sound you think all onomatopoeia has a little bit of sound. that is a no no some onomatopoeis have a lot of sound like KABLOOSH OR BOOOOM.
Yes, the EE vowel pair almost always has the long E sound. Feet rhymes with beet and beat.
A repeating consonant is when the same consonant sound is repeated in close succession in a word. For example, in the word "little," the "t" sound is repeated twice, making it a repeating consonant.