fear
The letter R is usually written as a capital R. The phonetic sound is ar or are.
Words such as bar, car, and start are not considered 'short a' words but are indicated by an "umlaut A" symbol where the A is said to be "R-shaped." It appears in one pronunciation of the word "father" as a British English homophone of the word "farther" because the R is not heard (fah-thuh). Similarly, there is a long A sound followed by an R that is called a caret A, which is the "air" sound in US English (fair, care).
ar nessa
ar =on, upon, overâr =ploughed land; ground
CALENDAR : a list of days or months, a schedule (cannot be spelled -er)
The letter R is usually written as a capital R. The phonetic sound is ar or are.
Yes, the word "army" contains the digraph "ar." A digraph is a combination of two letters that produce a single sound, and in this case, "ar" represents a distinct vowel sound in the word.
There is a short I, but the A has either an umlaut A (ar) sound or an AW sound.
Shirt has a short vowel sound. The sound is the [ər] category. It includes vowels with er, ur, ir, or, ar, and ear sounds. Examples are serve, curl, bird, doctor, dollar, and hearth.
"Chrome Hearts" is pronounced as "krohm herts." The first word "Chrome" sounds like "krome," rhyming with "foam," and the second word "Hearts" is pronounced as it is spelled, with a clear "h" sound and a soft "ar" like in "art."
Carp
Some words that can be formed with AR:ArcadeArchaicArcherArcheryArchArchiveArcticArdentArdorAreAren'tArgonArgotArgyleArmorArmageddonArmArmyArrangeArrangementArrayArrhythmiaArrestArrowArsenalArsonArteryArthritisArtichokeArticleArticulateArtificialArtistArtsyArtSome words that have AR in them:AlarmBareBarCareCarpetCarCartCharmCharChartDareDartDearthEarnEarEarthFareFarmFarFearGarGearHareHarmHartHearHeartJargonJarLargeLarkLearnMarchMareMarginalMargeMarkMarrowNarcNarrowNearOarParePartPartyPearQuarterQuartetQuartRareRearShareSpareStareTareTarpTearVariantVarietyWareWearYardYarnYear
Words such as bar, car, and start are not considered 'short a' words but are indicated by an "umlaut A" symbol where the A is said to be "R-shaped." It appears in one pronunciation of the word "father" as a British English homophone of the word "farther" because the R is not heard (fah-thuh). Similarly, there is a long A sound followed by an R that is called a caret A, which is the "air" sound in US English (fair, care).
Yes, it does. Although technically, it is an umlaut A, a special "ar" sound, not a short A.
its is pronounced cit-rone, not all words ar pronounced how they are spelled. Especially foreign ones. The 'ogne' all make up one sound, the 'ohn' sound.
αρχές (arches) [ ar- ch : sounds like h as in house,there is no ''k'' sound in it - es :clear s sound ]
Shirt has a short vowel sound. The sound is the [ər] category. It includes vowels with er, ur, ir, or, ar, and ear sounds. Examples are serve, curl, bird, doctor, dollar, and hearth.