I know only names: Joseph, Stephen. But there is 'ph' combination.
Are such words really exist?
Von Bingen is pronounced as "fon bing-en." The "V" in von is pronounced like an "f" sound, and the "g" in Bingen is pronounced like a hard "g" sound.
The spelling rule of changing a final "f" to "v" and adding "es" when making a noun plural helps ensure proper pronunciation. When you add an "s" to words that end in "f," often the pronunciation becomes awkward, so changing it to "v" helps maintain the sound of the word.
No, in Spanish the V is pronounced as a soft sound between a B and a V, like a mix of the two. The sound depends on the region or accent of the speaker.
Something like vash, a bit like bash with a v
usually you chAnge it to a "v" like leaf to leaves
The proper way of pronouncing Volkswagen: Folks-Vagen - the Germans v's sound more like f's and their w's sound like v's.
There are several words that end with the sound of "v." They include love, dove, above, shove, glove, and of.
of that's the only one that comes to mind. it has a /v/ sound.
The name came before the spelling. It might be more useful to wonder how the "v" sound ended up with the spelling "ph". Speculation: This might be related to the fact that the name is not always pronounced with the "v" sound. It sounds more like Stefan in many languages and cultures. As the name became familiar to English speakers, the hard "fricative" sound of "f" got softened with vocalization, producing "v". The only phonetic difference between "f" and "v" is the vocalization while pronouncing "v".
Von Bingen is pronounced as "fon bing-en." The "V" in von is pronounced like an "f" sound, and the "g" in Bingen is pronounced like a hard "g" sound.
votfvi
The spelling rule of changing a final "f" to "v" and adding "es" when making a noun plural helps ensure proper pronunciation. When you add an "s" to words that end in "f," often the pronunciation becomes awkward, so changing it to "v" helps maintain the sound of the word.
vite-layner It's German. After Franz Weitlaner. In ei or ie combinations, you drop the first and the second letter is pronounced like a long vowel (like a in ape, or i in kite). Also, German w's sound like english v's (and v's sound like f's). Volkswagen :)
Celtic is a family of languages, not a single language, so there will be variation in sound-spelling correspondence. In Welsh, f sounds like English v (and to write the English f sound requires ff). In Breton and in Scottish and Irish Gaelic, and in Cornish, f represents the same sound it does in English.
In English, the primary grapheme for the sound /v/ is the letter "v." However, it can also be represented by the digraph "ph" in certain contexts, such as in the word "vase" when pronounced in some dialects. Additionally, in borrowed words from other languages, the letter "f" can sometimes represent the /v/ sound, as seen in some instances of transliteration from languages that use different scripts. Overall, though, the "v" grapheme is the most common representation for this sound in English.
Some words that you can make with H V N N R F Q O are:hornforfrohononorofohonor
English nouns ending in an unvoiced f sound in the singular, but not spelled ff, change the f to a voiced v sound in the plural. Notice that the s of the plural is also voiced to a z in such words. There are other cases of this linguistic rule: the s in house is pronounced as a z in houses. See Verner's Law.