Most
Wild Colt words: words with i and o followed by two consonants --the vowels make the long sound (example: blind and cold).
aggressive, short-tempered, wild, raged, aggrivated
One syllable. Different dialects may accentuate the diphthong in this word so that it sounds like two syllables (why-yold). However, a diphthong is a moving monosyllabic sound. Thus, English dictionaries will show it as one syllable.
The spelling exstatic is incorrect. This is one (of many) examples where the sound is misleading: there is no 'x' in the word. It is spelled ecstatic. It means to act or feel wild or pleasantly excited.
Wild goats is the plural of wild goat. You could have one wild goat (singular) or many wild goats (plural).
Yes. The word "wild" is a long I, and rhymes with child and mild.
It is a long I sound as in the rhyming words child and mild, also piled, tiled and dialed.
No. Mild has a long I sound, as in wild. Milk has a short I vowel sound.
Wild Colt words: words with i and o followed by two consonants --the vowels make the long sound (example: blind and cold).
The word mild has a long I sound, as in wild or mile.
No, smile and wild do not rhyme. "Smile" has a long "i" sound, while "wild" has a short "i" sound.
Yes. The i is short as in which and ditch and list. Other endings produce a long i sound (dice, wild).
It depends on the specific word or context. Some words may have a long vowel sound, such as "cute," where the "u" makes the long /uː/ sound. Other words may have a short vowel sound, such as "cat," where the "a" makes the short /æ/ sound.
No.When used before a vowel sound, "the" has a long E sound.(The animal is wild.)When used before a consonant, "the" has a schwa or unstressed sound (thuh).(The wild animal is loose)
colt words
Colt
That's the way it is mastered.