No, its Long I: uyscreem or iscreem?
"Ice cream" contains both long and short vowel sounds. The "i" in "ice" is a long vowel sound, while the "e" in "cream" is a short vowel sound.
Yes, "cream" has a short vowel sound. The "ea" in "cream" is pronounced as a short vowel sound like the "e" in "dress."
It is not "ice cream for ice cream", it is supposed to sound like that but it is actually "I scream for ice cream". The phrase is derived from a popular 1927 song titled "I Scream, You Scream, We All Scream for Ice Cream" .
Actually, it depends on the ice Cream, Fat ice cream you can fore a short time.
No. The I in "ice" has the long I sound, as in island and item. The E is silent as in nice.
Well, I don't want to sound all smart but the actual definition of ice cream is a frozen dessert containing cream, sugar, and flavoring. Source: wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
ice cream ice cream ice cream ice cream ice cream ice cream
Short vowel sound. Words such as ice and item are long I vowel sounds.
for a short time yes
it depends on how much ice cream you've eaten
He eats ice cream - Does he eat ice cream? He ate the ice cream - Did he eat the ice cream? He is eating the ice cream - Is he eating the ice cream? He was eating ice cream - Was he eating ice cream? They have eaten the ice cream - Have they eaten the ice cream? He has eaten the ice cream - Has he eaten the ice cream? He had eaten the ice cream - Had he eaten the ice cream? He had been eating ice cream - Had he been eating ice cream? He will eat ice cream to morrow - Will he eat ice ream tomorrow? He is going to eat ice cream tomorrow - Is he going to eat ice cream tomorrow?
ice cream ice cream we all scream ofr ice cream