way lay bay may day say okay play pay hay jay blue-jay
Yes. They both have a long A sound created by a silent E. Cake rhymes with fake and place rhymes with face.
No. The A in place is a long A (ay) sound, with a silent E. It rhymes with face.
Simply put, any word that ends with the sound "ay"Examples: Day, Play, Stay, Buffet**note how "buffet" does not end with "ay", yet it still ends phonetically with "ay"
It has a long A sound (ay) from the AI pair. It rhymes with aim and name.
Yes, "ray" and "day" do rhyme. Both words end with the same "ay" sound.
Came has a long A (ay) vowel sound, and the E is silent.It rhymes with name, fame, and claim.
No. The word "chain" has a long A sound (chayn) made by the AI. Rhymes with pain and rain.
No. The vowel sound in come is a short U sound (uh). It rhymes with some and also with sum and hum.The long O sound is (oh) as seen in the words comb and coma.
Yes. The ending Y has a long E sound (san-dee). It rhymes with dandy and candy.
The pronunciation of Aiken, South Carolina is AY-kin. The "Ay" sound should sound like the "ay" sound in "hay" or "way." The "ken" sound should sound like the word "kin."
The word eighty has both. It sounds like (ay-tee).The EI makes a long A sound, and the Y makes a long E sound. It rhymes with matey.
Day, Way, pay, Sundae, well...basically anything ending in the ''ay' sound