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 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
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."