Only if you pronounce street as "streesh".
The past tense of leash is leashed.
Yes. The EA in leash has the long E sound. Other than "unleash" it only rhymes with hashish and the French words quiche and pastiche.
No, the word 'leash' is not a short E word. The E and A together in this word make the long E sound, as in beach, so that leash more or less rhymes with quiche and pastiche. There are words where the E and A together do make the short E sound. Some of those words are thread, bread, and head.
no but it rhymes with stout............if that helps ;]
This is the type of end rhyme referred to as "true rhyme."
yes, street rhymes with heat.
Yes, street does rhyme with concrete. The only problem is that street is a one-syllable word, and to rhyme exactly with "concrete," the stress in "concrete" would need to be on the second syllable. So it's not an exact rhyme, but it's close.
Myrtle buys a dog leash from a man on the street on her way to the apartment.
no because teeth has the tt sound and street has the str sound
Barksharkand thats it
the person that has the unleashed dog
There are two ways to answer this question since I don't know which you need:the possessive form for the compound noun 'dog leash' is the dog leash's (What is the dog leash's cost?).the possessive form for the leash of the dog is dog's leash (The dog's leash is new.).
Dogs come to visit from miles around.
The past tense of leash is leashed.
Yes. The EE is a long E sound, to rhyme with street and beat.
leash = مقود (muqud)
The plural of leash is leashes.