If you mean words that rhyme with "air" these are some:
affair
cere
chair
coheir
dere
eclair
fair
fere
flair
frere
galere
glair
hair
heir
impair
inhere
lair
mair
midair
mohair
pair
pere
quaere
repair
speir
stair
their
there
tuyere
unfair
unhair
vair
wair
where
if you want to know how to get words with "ear" in them here you go...
1.hear
2.learn
3.heart
4.heard
Actually neither. The EA is followed by an R in near, so it has a form of long E called a caret I sound. In the US, it sounds like "ear" and in the UK like "ee-uh."
ferme sounds like farm except the e that sounds like the first e in shepherd or like the ê in french word même, the last e is not prononced
It is a long E, because it sounds like the letter E. (rhymes with be, we).
Yes long sounds like the letter. Meet=long "e".
Three e - e - y. The y is a vowel here sounds like 'e'
Yes, but not from the E. The E has the short E sound (eh) while the ending Y sounds like E.When the P is not sounded, the word sounds like (M-T) or (ehm-tee)
In terms of pronunciation it has two vowel sounds, ɜ: (sounds like "er" as in "her") and i: (sounds like "e" as in "he"). The IPA is /θɜ:ti:n/. In terms of spelling it has 3, an "i" and two "e"s
One example of a word that ends in 'e' but is pronounced like 'a' is "chocolate." This is because the 'e' at the end is silent, and the 'a' is emphasized.
In Spanish, the word "pique" is pronounced with a long e sound, which sounds like "pee-kay." The 'e' is emphasized and lasts longer in this pronunciation.
It is pepa. In the maori language and in New Zealand generally, 'e' sounds like a short 'e' as in 'get' and 'i' sounds like a long 'ee'. So pepa is pronounced more like peh-pa.
"Nic", but spell it as "nitz" when 'i' sounds like 'e'.
THE answer is sit it sounds like seet