I think Q makes the 'kh' sound.
The letter Q makes a (kw) sound when paired with U. Practically all Q words are QU words and have the (kw) sound. There is no silent U. Some words from other languages use Q without a U and may have either the (kw) sound or just a (k) sound. E.g. qoph (Hebrew letter) has the sound (kof)
The ISBN of A Sound Like Someone Trying Not to Make a Sound is 0385746806.
the long ē sound
The letters OA make the long O sound in goal
No, 'au' does not make any sound like 'ou'. 'au' sounds as in 'Now'.
Yes. The I has a short I sound, as in bit and sit. The U is paired with the Q to make the KW sound.
The correct spelling is "equations." *Most English words with a Q have a U following to make the KW sound.
The letter Q makes a (kw) sound when paired with U. Practically all Q words are QU words and have the (kw) sound. There is no silent U. Some words from other languages use Q without a U and may have either the (kw) sound or just a (k) sound. E.g. qoph (Hebrew letter) has the sound (kof)
its not khubool its Qubool and it is a word from urdu but Indian always use "Kh" sound for "Q", while in urdu "Q" sound as "KK". it's mean: except its not khubool its Qubool and it is a word from urdu but Indian always use "Kh" sound for "Q", while in urdu "Q" sound as "KK". it's mean: except
opaque
Sci Q - 2008 What's That Sound was released on: USA: 20 July 2008
That is a rule in the Spanish language. U follows a Q to make the sylable sound depending on the pronuciation needed. In the English language there is a rule to the letter Q that states that a word starting with the letter Q is allways followed by the U as a second letter.
zoe
It doesn't mean anything in particular, it was used this way to sound good in the song.
Because English likes to confuse people who are trying to learn it.
Yes. Both have a short I sound, because the U forms the "kw" sound with the Q.
Queen Charlotte