clue and flu
Here are a few words that have an ey ending that sounds like a: grey, hey, obey.
The EA in earn has the "caret U" sound, a short U + R. In US English, it is a homophone for the word "urn." The sound appears in few non-R words. U words - fur, curl, urge, hurt E words - her, were, fern, prefer, term I words - bird, stir, third, dirt, firm, dirge, squirt O words - word, worm EA words - heard, learn, pearl
Yes, it is the "eh" sound, as in test and sent.Yes, the word 'tent' does have a short e sound. A few other words that have the same sounds are deck, hem, and pet.
The I is a short I sound as in the words bid, dig, fib, gin, hit, and list. The OO has the long U (long OO) sound as in loon, moon, and two. Other long OO sound words include due, sue, dune, flute, chute, suit and nuance. There are also words that have a long YOO sound (Y + OO), as appears from certain spellings including cute, fuel, feud, mule, mute, few, and view. Also in some words that start with a U, such as unit, use, uniform, and ukulele.
Words with the same vowel sound as the word 'home' include the rhyming words comb, foam, and roam. Also other long O words with O (old, poll), O and silent E (bone, hole, zone), OE (foe, toe), OA (boat, loan), and OW (crow, own). Also a few words from French (beau, faux, gauche).
Words that have the same vowel sound as "rope" include: cope, hope, slope, and grope. These words all have the same long "o" vowel sound, which is pronounced as /oʊ/. This sound is a diphthong, a combination of two vowel sounds within the same syllable.
There are some Japanese words that phonetically sound the same such as "biiru" which means "beer". However the flip side is that most words like that are is because of their English meanings. As a side note there are a few names that I heard of while living in Japan that are similar in sound, but not meaning. Japanese: Erika, Mei Western: Erica, May Not sure how much help this is, but I hope I helped a little.
The word cute has a long U (long YOO) sound as in mute, mule, cue, feud, and fuel. The YOO sound is also in U words without a silent E, such as unit, uniform, and united EW words such as few and view
If you mean phonically think of any word with the last letter as a Y. Eg: Finally (fine-nal-ee)
The EW vowel pair in "chew" is a long OO (long U) sound as in flew and crew. The long OO can be heard in these other spellings: O - tomb, two, to O - (silent E) move, prove OO - cool, soon, boot OU - group, youth OE - canoe, shoe U - tune, rule, flute, ruby UE - due, true UI - bruise, cruise EU - sleuth
Most words spelled with -ear have a long E sound called a caret I, which sounds like "ear" as in fear, gear, and hear. It is also heard in words such as beer and pier. A few have the long A sound called a caret A, which sounds like "air" as in fare and fair. These are bear, pear, swear, wear, and tear (rip).
This is a word game for Kindergarteners that teaches them how to recognize the letter P or the 'puh' sound. The question is basically asking children to name other words that start with the letter p. A few other words starting with p are: Pie Panda Pot Pan Pig Pear Pail Pet Pants