Rough.
Cough.
Trough. enough
illiterate
The letters "ph" usually sound like "f." For example, the word "laugh" sounds like /laf/; the word "rough" sounds like /ruf/. Sometimes the letters are written together but belong to two different syllables, in which case they sound like "p" and "h." Example: haphazard
Another word for a brass-like alloy that is 6 letters and ends in "en" is "latten."
okapi
to.....
Cello is a five letter word that sounds like six letters when pronounced. The letter c is pronounced ch to make the word sound like six letters.
Easter Island sounds like it could fit those criteria.
One example of a word that ends in 'e' but is pronounced like 'a' is "chocolate." This is because the 'e' at the end is silent, and the 'a' is emphasized.
it doesn't but it sounds like it ends in your! CURE!
In English, the letters "ci" typically sound like "sh" when followed by an "i" or an "e." This pronunciation is common in words like "ocean" or "special."
There's a rule applied that the C or G is only soft when it comes before an E, I, or Y. When the C or G comes before any other letters or it ends, then it'll be hard. Technically, when the word ends with a C or G, then these letters would also remain hard. If we wanted a soft C or G at the end of the words, we add an E at the end like fence, prince, dance, lance, glance, chance, force, charge, merge, verge, hinge, singe, tinge, lunge, large, surge, etc. The other way is to use an S or J instead because the soft C sounds like an S while the soft G sounds like a J.
it sounds like led hey i don't know maybe its lead it has four letters