Bright, brightly
Alight
Fright, frighten, frightened
Slight, slightly
The O in the word long may be a short vowel, but more usually an AW sound (caret O) as seen in the rhyming words song, strong, and wrong. This AW sound is seen in words such as taught, sought, dawn, ball (bawl), and daughter.
The O in more can be considered a long O sound (oh) but can be a "caret O" pronunciation as seen in the words or (oar) and for (four). The E is silent in either case.
Long vowels sound like the letters of the vowels in the alphabet. Glass has a short a sound, if it had a long vowel sound it would sound like glacier. Hear the difference between the short vowel sound of glass and the long vowel sound of Glacier?Short vowel sounds are shorter than long vowel sounds. The sound is more sharp and cut off. "A" is a shorter sound than an "ay" sound.
No. The OW pair is an ou/ow sound, which is neither long nor short, and the -er is a schwa sound. (fl/ow-ur) The pronunciation in some dialects sounds more like (flah-wur), again with no long sounds.
The word "does" has a long o sound, while the word "have" has a short o sound.
The second A has a long A sound. In the homophone "aweigh" it is the EIGH or more specifically the EI that has the long A sound.
2 or more
Words that end in y and use the long u sound are:buoychop sueyeuryfuryThere are more, but you get the idea.
The O in more can be considered a long O sound (oh) but can be a "caret O" pronunciation as seen in the words or (oar) and for (four). The E is silent in either case.
Long vowels sound like the letters of the vowels in the alphabet. Glass has a short a sound, if it had a long vowel sound it would sound like glacier. Hear the difference between the short vowel sound of glass and the long vowel sound of Glacier?Short vowel sounds are shorter than long vowel sounds. The sound is more sharp and cut off. "A" is a shorter sound than an "ay" sound.
The O in the word long may be a short vowel, but more usually an AW sound (caret O) as seen in the rhyming words song, strong, and wrong. This AW sound is seen in words such as taught, sought, dawn, ball (bawl), and daughter.
There are no 9 letter English words that can be made with the given letters. The longest words are 6 letters long and they are: bleary, barely, barley, arable. If you use the letters more than once, you can make the following words: bearberry, blaeberry, cerebella, clearable, labelable.
No. This is the long O sound called the "circumflex" (ô).It appears in the words OR, or MORE, or FORWARD.(Some English users pronounce orangutan with a regular long OH sound.)
Four or more letter words that can be made from the letters in BACKBONE are:acneaeonbabebackbaconbakebancobanebankbeaconbeakbeanbeckbeckonbockbonecakecanecanoecokeconeconkebonkenoknobkoannabobnecknockoakenoceanonce
The number of letters in words varies. There is no specific number of letters or of words in a sentence. In poetry, the shortest expression is "O !" An utterance can be as short as "Hi." Two or three letter words make up simple sentences in everyday speech. More complex sentences need more words, and hence, will have more letters in them.
No. Every vowel can have more than one sound, depending on the spelling of the word and its historical source. For example, the letter E can have a long sound (ee), a short sound (eh), an R-influenced sound (ir), and a schwa sound (unstressed eh or uh). Or it can be silent, which may influence the sound of other vowels. Similarly, more than one vowel or vowel group can have the identical sound. The long A (ay) sound can be made in: A words - base, cake, late AY words - lay, may, pay AI words - fail, maid, plain EI words - veil EIGH words - weigh, weight, neighbor (and the related "air" sound by EA as well)
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