Tear, wear
Wonderful, incredible... Kinda more half rhymes but can work in a poem.
The same "ea" sound as in "mean" can be found in words like "bean," "clean," and "dream." These words all feature the long "e" sound pronounced as /iː/. Other examples include "scene" and "team."
There are a few words with EA followed by R which sounds like a long A, but is technically a caret A (air) sound: bear, pear, swear, wear and tear (rip).The words that do have a long A include great (grate), break (brake), and steak (stake).
The three common ones are break, steak, and great. (the words bear, pear, swear, tear, and wear are called caret A words, not long A)
ea refers to Elastane
bear
Wonderful, incredible... Kinda more half rhymes but can work in a poem.
here are some BETTER words that rhyme with ever:Nevercleverforeverhoweverwheneverwhereverwhoevertogetherhow likes this?never
The EA has a short E sound. The word rhymes with weather and tether.
er (with the E being the same sound as the 'ea' in the word 'bear') jay (with the J being the same sound as the J in the expression 'déja vu') bet er-jay-bet
There is a huge number of 4 letter words that have ea in the middle. bead beak beam bean bear beat and so on
No. The EA pair is pronounced as a long E (ee). It rhymes with least and feast.
No. The EA pair is pronounced as a long E (ee). It rhymes with least and feast.
Yes. The EA in "east" has a long E sound. It rhymes with feast and least.
"Yourself" is: Ο ΕΑΥΤΟΣ ΣΟΥ (pronounced: O Ea-ftos soo), "Ea-" just like in: bear. "Soo" just like in: shoe.
Electronic Arts Sports, same concept as EA, except they gave it a section for sports.
No. The EA pair has an R-shaped long A called a caret A (AIR) sound, as in bare.