The first E has a short E sound, the second is a schwa (unstressed eh/uh).
Some words that end in the vowel y and add es to form the plural are alley, journey, and key.
Es corta en ingles
because "s" sounds like es so you cant have to vowels next to each other
The first syllable is a short E. The I is a schwa, but the final syllable can have either a long A (es-tuh-mayt) or a short I (es-tuh-mitt) preceding the silent E.
In the word "artichoke," the vowel sound in the second syllable, "choke," is indeed a long vowel sound. The "o" in "choke" is pronounced as /oʊ/, which is a long vowel sound. The first syllable, "arti," contains a short vowel sound. Therefore, only the second syllable has a long vowel.
Syllables in sandwiches are the different sounds or beats that make up the spoken word "sandwich." In this case, the word "sandwich" has two syllables: "sand" and "wich." Each syllable contains a vowel sound.
This is not strictly true, as words could also have -i, or -es, or if it has a double vowel in the word, these might change to another double vowel or two different vowels.
They are both technically right, but the majority of people would say 'an' STD. When talking about something that begins with a vowel-sounding letter, we tend to use 'an' - it just sounds better to say "an automobile" than "a automobile" after all. That's the reason why we have that a/an difference, the way the phrase sounds.The 'S' in STD stands for 'Sexual' and would therefore be 'a Sexual' if vocalising the unabbreviated word. But when it is abbreviated, it is pronounced 'Ess' and therefore begins with a vowel-sounding letter. It therefore sounds more natural to say 'an STD' though neither version is more grammatically correct than the other.It is a STD.
Most people here pronounce it like it is, es tan her-moe-sa. In Spanish, it sounds more like: es, ton ermosa with some rolls in it
no it sounds weird. salmones ??
It depend es on what kind of dog you have.
Es un murcielago