One animal that ends with the "eh" sound is the "kangaroo." The name concludes with the "roo" sound, which can be phonetically similar to "eh" in certain accents. Other examples could include "buffalo" or "puma," depending on regional pronunciations.
Yes. The E has a short E sound as in stem and pep.
"Head" and "bead" do not rhyme because they have different vowel sounds. "Head" ends in a short 'eh' sound, while "bead" ends in a long 'ee' sound. Rhyming words need to have the same vowel sound in order to sound similar.
BREATHE : to draw breath, respire - pronounced "breeth" (long e sound, ends with expelled air "thuh" sound as in "seethe") BREATH : respiration - pronounced "brehth" ("eh" sound to the e, as in "death")
The second e in overhead is short it says eh eh eh eh like head were ur brain is. Eh eh eh.
No. The long 'e' sound is 'ee.' In the word sketch, there is a short 'e' sound - the 'e' sounds like 'eh' (sk-eh-tch).
The short E sound is "eh" as in bed and yet.
No. The "er" sound in "burglar" is a schwa or unstressed vowel sound (eh, uh).
No. The I has a schwa sound (eh/ih/uh) not specifically the short I as in skim.
Kibbeh is pronounced as "kib-eh." The "kib" is pronounced with a hard "k" sound like in "kick," and the "eh" at the end is a short "e" sound like in "pet."
No, the word "breakfast" has the vowel sound "eh" as in "bed", not the short e sound.
No, the word "bell" does not have a short "e" sound. The "e" in "bell" is pronounced as the "eh" sound.
No, the word "jet" does not have a short e sound. It is pronounced with a short e sound, as in "eh."