Tuna has a long "oo" sound, as in smooth, tune, spoon, and rule.
Book has a short "oo" sound, as in foot and look.
Sound reflects from a smooth surface the same way light does---the angle of incidence is equal to the angle of reflection. Its on page 385.
The short OO sound of stood is also in good, wood, could, and should. The same sound is heard in book, cook, bull, and pull.
They are homophones Read and read. He 'read' the book. He likes to 'read' the book.
No. The OO sound in good is short, as in book and foot. The OO sound in soon is a long OO (long U) as in moon, soup, and dune.
thier both the same
No, the sound is the same
Some words that mean the same as volume are: space, sound (level), book, publication, amount, property (as in magnitude).
The 2011 Best Sound Design of a Musical Tony went to Brian Ronan. He received the award for his work on the sound design for The Book of Mormon. Ronan was also nominated in the same category, in the same year, for his work on the sound design of Anything Goes.
Yes. The short OO vowel sound is in stood, good, book, and foot, and also the rhyming words could, should, and would.
One example of alliteration in "The Book Thief" is in the phrase "frighteningly frail." Alliteration is the repetition of the same initial consonant sound in neighboring words.
Just The Same asin pools but you have to be responsible for everything you do and there are no lifeguards around so you are responsible for your own safety. Be aware of your own limitations.
We don't actually all sound the same, we do sound different. But if you mean that we sound the same if we sing in tune or pitch.