Clothes is monosyllabic.
Vowels are letters that include A, E, I, O, U, and occasionally Y.
A closed syllable. An open syllable. A vowel-consonant-e syllable. A vowel team syllable. A consonant-le syllable. An r-controlled syllable.
As an unstressed syllable, the letter 'r' (which does not have to be a vowel in the English language, just as unstressed syllable)
A syllable is a unit of pronunciation. A syllable consists of either a vowel that's alone or a vowel and one or more consonant sounds. Most monosyllabic words contain at least one vowel or vowel sound. Square has the vowel sound at the u and a.
First syllable long, second syllable short
There is another consonant-vowel-consonant syllable that follows the first one.
A closed syllable. An open syllable. A vowel-consonant-e syllable. A vowel team syllable. A consonant-le syllable. An r-controlled syllable.
No, "tasteful" does not have a short vowel sound in the first syllable. The first syllable "taste" has a long vowel sound.
Yes, the vowel "i" in "miner" has a short sound, pronounced as /ɪ/.
They are called "closed syllables" because the syllable ends with the consonant sound.The 6 types of syllables are:Closed syllable (short vowel sound)Open syllable (ends with a long vowel sound)Vowel-consonant-E syllable (silent E makes preceding vowel long)Vowel team syllable (two vowels paired to make one new sound, e.g. mouth, taut)Consonant +L + E syllable (creates a trailing L, uhl, sound e.g. handle, puzzle)R-controlled syllable (vowel followed by R changes the pronunciation)
One vowel consonant E syllable word is despite.
No, the word music does not have a short vowel sound in the first syllable. The vowel sound in the first syllable is the long U sound.
No, the word "heavy" does not have a short vowel sound. The "e" in heavy makes a long vowel sound.
No, it has a long vowel sound in the first syllable.
Some examples of words with a vowel in each syllable are "ocean," "video," and "rectangle."
No, it has a long vowel sound in the first syllable.
As an unstressed syllable, the letter 'r' (which does not have to be a vowel in the English language, just as unstressed syllable)
A syllable is a unit of pronunciation. A syllable consists of either a vowel that's alone or a vowel and one or more consonant sounds. Most monosyllabic words contain at least one vowel or vowel sound. Square has the vowel sound at the u and a.