Long
No. It has a short I sound. It rhymes with fix, bricks, and sticks.
Yes. The I has a short I (ih) sound as in sick and fix.
No, the word "six" does not have the short "i" sound. The sound in "six" is more like the "ih" sound.
Yes. Mix has a short i sound (ih) as in the rhyming words fix, nix, and six. The X itself has a -ks sound, which typically appears in words ending in -cks (hicks, nicks, picks, ticks).
The language with the fewest vowel sounds is Rotokas, a language spoken in Papua New Guinea. It has only six vowel sounds.
No. It has a short I sound. It rhymes with fix, bricks, and sticks.
Yes. The I has a short I (ih) sound as in sick and fix.
No, the word "six" does not have the short "i" sound. The sound in "six" is more like the "ih" sound.
Yes. Mix has a short i sound (ih) as in the rhyming words fix, nix, and six. The X itself has a -ks sound, which typically appears in words ending in -cks (hicks, nicks, picks, ticks).
If the number starts with a vowel sound, yes. It doesn't have to BE a vowel, but it has to have a vowel SOUND. Examples: A one (one starts with a w sound so it is not a vowel SOUND) A two A three A four A five A six A seven An eight (eight starts with the long A sound, a vowel sound) A nine A ten An eighty (same as with eight) An eleven A hundred A thousand An eight hundred You could say, for instance, "I've never seen an eight hundred dollar bill."
Words that have a single E followed by a silent E have the long E sound : cede, gene, mete, scene, compete, and complete. Many long E words have a "vowel pair" with or without a silent E at the end : trees, cheese, seas, tease, breeze, and keys.
Pigeon
asthma
For DC: four or six parallel lines - long, short, long, short, long, short. The long end is the positive part. For AC: a waveline (one cycle) within a circle.
The words six and lip do, but dice has a long I and a silent E, to rhyme with mice.
Rhythm = contains six letters and the only vowel in this word is the "y".
The language with the fewest vowel sounds is Rotokas, a language spoken in Papua New Guinea. It has only six vowel sounds.