These rhyming words include:
Plurals of some Y or IE words
dies, cries, flies, lies, pies, replies, ties, vies, ayes, dyes
Plurals of long I words
sighs, highs, thighs, buys, guys
The endings or suffixes are -ise or -ize and -yze or -yse.
British English spells several words with -ise or -yse that are -ize and -yze in US English.
Examples of -ise and -ize endings:
rise, despise, devise, disguise, surmise, enterprise, surprise, reprise, wise
prize, size, realize
Examples of -yze or -yse endings
paralyze, analyze, catalyze
gay lord
No, but in words ending in "W", it often sounds like a vowel.
words that contain or like worker that sounds like er
Words like "love" and "prove" or "time" and "line" are examples of slant rhyme. They have similar ending sounds but are not perfect rhymes.
A word that sounds like "egg" is "beg." Both words have a similar ending sound, making them rhyme. Another example is "leg," which also shares that same phonetic quality.
No, they sound like they should but they don't
Here are a few words that have an ey ending that sounds like a: grey, hey, obey.
In "silent E" words such as bite, mite, site, white, the E ending changes the sound of the short I to a long I. There are no English words where a final single E sounds like a long I. However, there are IE words such as die, pie, lie, and vie, and YE endings such as bye and dye.
Some words that have the same ending sound as who and to are:blewbluebrewcluechewcluecoocoupcrewcuedewdodrewdueeweflewflufluegluegnugoogrewhewhueknewlieuloomewmoonewpewphewpoohqueuerouxruescrewshoeshooshrewskewslewspewstewstrewsuethrewthroughtootruetwoviewwooyewyouzoo
Spanish words ending in -r take the accent on the final syllable. Also, European vowels are not diphthongs, as in English, so the the o sounds a bit more like awe than like owe, the u sounds like oo. Say awkool-TAR
There are many words, but one example is the word "father" in which the 'a' sounds like the 'o' in box.
Scottburgh is pronounced as "Scott-burg," with the emphasis on the first syllable. The "Scott" part sounds just like the name Scott, and "burgh" is pronounced like "burg," similar to the ending of words like "Pittsburgh."