Words that begin with a long E sound include:
each
eager
eagle
ease / easy / easier / easiest
easel
east / eastern / easterly
eat /eaten / eating / eatery
eaves
eavesdrop
ecosystem
edict
eel
either (one pronunciation)
eke / eking
emu
eve
even / evenly
evening
evil
*words such as ear and eerie are not technically long E words (R-shaped)
* words such as elastic, enamel, elate, elude, emote, and event usually begin with short I sounds
There are many words, including:
oak, oar, oasis
obey, Oboe
ocean
odor, odometer
ogle
ohm
okay
old, oleander
omen
open,
otology
over
owe, own
ozone
able
ace, acorn
agency, agent
aim
ale
alien
anal
ape, apex
asymmetric
atypical
azoic
eight, eighteen, eighty
abhorrentabsentaccurateaccidentacidacrobatactactoractressaddaddressadjectiveadmitaffluentaffectafteragileaggravateagitateappleapprehendashastronomyatatomatrophyatticattitudeavenueaverage
anchor, ax
No. "An" is used before words that begin with a vowel sound, but not all words that begin with vowels begin with vowel sounds. "Urinalysis" begins with a "y" sound, so you would use "a" rather than "an" before it as you would for any word that begins with a "y" sound: a urinalysis, a yawn. Examples of words that begin with "u" and also begin with a vowel sound are "udder", "ugly", and "unhappy".
Ant
blaze
Words that begin with a short A sound include:ableaceacheacornagealeaidailaimanalangelaortaapeapexapronasymmetricedelweiss (ay-del-vice)
"Stale" has a long 'a' sound. It is pronounced as "stay-ul."
Long u-sound words: U-boat, uniform, unicorn, universe.The abstract ones: unilateralism, unification, unison.
Some words that begin with the short 'i' sound are: information intuition inability invariably
The words include able, ace, age, ale, anal, ape, apex, ate, and aviation. The AI words aid, ail, and aim also have a long A sound.
abhorrentabsentaccurateaccidentacidacrobatactactoractressaddaddressadjectiveadmitaffluentaffectafteragileaggravateagitateappleapprehendashastronomyatatomatrophyatticattitudeavenueaverage
Words that begin with the same sound as net are: not normal never Nevada nor net never north necessary
express
anchor, ax
No it is not. In fact, There are no Hebrew names that begin with F, because Hebrew words cannot begin with the F sound
In English, words with a long 'a' sound spelled AA include: bazaar, llama, raar, kaama, paaprika.
No. "An" is used before words that begin with a vowel sound, but not all words that begin with vowels begin with vowel sounds. "Urinalysis" begins with a "y" sound, so you would use "a" rather than "an" before it as you would for any word that begins with a "y" sound: a urinalysis, a yawn. Examples of words that begin with "u" and also begin with a vowel sound are "udder", "ugly", and "unhappy".