Yes, the word "loyal" has two vowel sounds: /oʊ/ and /ə/.
The words "mouse" and "how" both have the same vowel sound, pronounced as /aʊ/.
Here are two words that use the same vowel sound as "ear": 'fear' and 'near'.
"Bunce" and "guns" have the same vowel sound as "once".
No, the vowel sound in "quail" is pronounced as [ei], while the vowel sound in "rain" is pronounced as [eɪ]. The sound in "quail" is a diphthong, combining two vowel sounds into one, while the sound in "rain" is a pure vowel sound.
bunce, ponce
When two words have the same vowel sound, it is known as assonance.
The words "mouse" and "how" both have the same vowel sound, pronounced as /aʊ/.
Here are two words that use the same vowel sound as "ear": 'fear' and 'near'.
"Bunce" and "guns" have the same vowel sound as "once".
No, the vowel sound in "quail" is pronounced as [ei], while the vowel sound in "rain" is pronounced as [eɪ]. The sound in "quail" is a diphthong, combining two vowel sounds into one, while the sound in "rain" is a pure vowel sound.
Words that have the same vowel sound as "moon" include: soon, spoon, balloon, cartoon. These words all contain the same long "oo" vowel sound as in "moon," which is represented by the phonetic symbol /uː/. The vowel sound in these words is a diphthong, which means it is a combination of two vowel sounds within the same syllable.
bunce, ponce
Some examples of CVVC (consonant-vowel-vowel-consonant) words include "rain," "keep," and "feet." These words are typically two-syllable words with a long vowel sound in the middle.
Two words that sound like "chew" are "hue" and "moo." These words have a similar vowel sound to "chew."
No, "gloomy" and "look" do not have the same vowel sound. In "gloomy," the vowel sound is /uː/, as in the word "blue." In "look," the vowel sound is /ʊ/, which is a shorter and more closed sound. The two words have different vowel sounds due to the pronunciation of the letters "oo" in each word.
The rhyming words turn and churn, obviously, and the words fern, learn, stern, and yearn have the same vowel sound. But other words have the "caret U" sound of a short U followed by an R. They include germ, kernel, bird, were, and her (also herd and heard).
The word two has a long OO (long U) vowel sound, as does two and to.It also sounds like the Spanish pronoun tu (you).