There are only a few: aisle, aisles in English, and words originally in other languages such as banzai, bonsai, samurai (Japanese), assegai (Portuguese, from Arabic-African).
Words with the long i sound and spelled with "ai" include: afraid, train, main, and explain.
The short I vowel sound in "shiny" sounds like "sh-ih-nee". It is a quick and crisp sound that is typically spelled with the letter 'i' in words like "sit", "fit", and "did".
The spelling pattern "ol" often represents the long o sound in English, as in words like "roll" and "mold." This is just one of the many ways English words can be spelled to represent a particular sound.
The homophone for "to make jokes" is "toe maze yokes." Homophones are words that sound the same but are spelled differently and have different meanings.
Some words that end in "y" and make the long i sound are rely, deny, and terrify.
It has a long vowel sound, like "bake," "make," or "take." A short vowel sound can be found in words like "hat," "bat," or "cat."
The words include: neigh (neighbor) sleigh weigh (weight, weighty) eight (eighty, eighteen) *These words also make the long A with EIG: deign feign reign
Chlorine, chlorophyl, choropleth.
The short I vowel sound in "shiny" sounds like "sh-ih-nee". It is a quick and crisp sound that is typically spelled with the letter 'i' in words like "sit", "fit", and "did".
Words using "fe" can use the long "e", as in "femur" and "fecal", but not always. Most "de" and "re" prefix words use the long "e". And of course the two-letter words (be, he, me, we, and ye). The "ce" words (cede, cease) add the normal trailing "e" to make the long sound.
no. they both make the long vowel sound if you can hold it then its long
The spelling pattern "ol" often represents the long o sound in English, as in words like "roll" and "mold." This is just one of the many ways English words can be spelled to represent a particular sound.
The homophone for "to make jokes" is "toe maze yokes." Homophones are words that sound the same but are spelled differently and have different meanings.
Words that end in y and use the long u sound are:buoychop sueyeuryfuryThere are more, but you get the idea.
You can add either an E or an A after the E to get a long E sound. The words beet and beatare homophones (sound-alike words).
Yes, the word 'bread' does have the short e sound. But not all words that have the e and a together make the same short e sound. An example of a word where the e and a make the long e sound is bead. But you also have words that are spelled exactly the same but sound different and mean different things, such as lead (with a long E meaning show someone the way) and lead (with the short e meaning a heavy metal). Or tear (with short e means to rip) and tear (with long e means the drops that fall when someone cries).
Some words that end in "y" and make the long i sound are rely, deny, and terrify.
When doing short a sounds the letter a will make a sound such as in the word cat. In the word cat the a is making a short 'a' sound. To make the long a sound another vowel has to be changing or contradicting the a. Some long a words are - lake, take & make. There are many words with the long a sound that don't follow that pattern such as mail hail and hair as well as pail.