The 'ue' in "glue" represents a long vowel sound.
The UE vowel pair has the long U (long OO) vowel sound, as in blue and glue.
It has a long vowel sound.The vowels UE may be pronounced as one form of the long U : yoo or oo.So the pronunciation may be one syllable (fyool) or two (few-uhl).
The UE may or may not be a pair, but creates the long U (long YOO) sound (fyool or fyoo-uhl).
It is two vowels together in a word are pronounced together, that may have the sound of either, or a separate sound. Normally these are long vowel sounds but can vary in words from different roots.Vowel pairs include:AA (Dutch, short A)AE (long E)AI (normally long A)AY (normally long AEA (long E, long A)EE (long E)EI or IE (long E, long I)EU (long U)EY (long E, long A)IA (long A, ay)IO (YO, includes long O)IU (YOO, long U)OA (long O, caret O)OE (long O)OI (OY sound)OO (short OO, long U)OU (long U or OW)OY (OY sound)UA (short A, or WA)UE (long U)UY (long I)* The vowels in piano or via or duo are not pairs, but pronounced separately.* The OY sound is a blend of three long vowels : O-I-E.
The OO pair in room is a long U (long OO) sound, as in doom and bloom. This can also be made by O as in do and to (or in tomb), by U as in dune and flute, or by UE as in blue, clue, and sue.
The UE vowel pair has the long U (long OO) vowel sound, as in blue and glue.
It has a long vowel sound.The vowels UE may be pronounced as one form of the long U : yoo or oo.So the pronunciation may be one syllable (fyool) or two (few-uhl).
The UE may or may not be a pair, but creates the long U (long YOO) sound (fyool or fyoo-uhl).
'League' has a confusing spelling, but it is just pronounced 'leeg', with a long E sound. (The EA sounds like a long E, the UE is silent.)
Yes, in the word "flute," the "ue" creates a long "oo" sound, pronounced like /uː/. This vowel sound is similar to that in words like "blue" and "true." The long "oo" sound is characteristic of certain vowel combinations in English.
It is two vowels together in a word are pronounced together, that may have the sound of either, or a separate sound. Normally these are long vowel sounds but can vary in words from different roots.Vowel pairs include:AA (Dutch, short A)AE (long E)AI (normally long A)AY (normally long AEA (long E, long A)EE (long E)EI or IE (long E, long I)EU (long U)EY (long E, long A)IA (long A, ay)IO (YO, includes long O)IU (YOO, long U)OA (long O, caret O)OE (long O)OI (OY sound)OO (short OO, long U)OU (long U or OW)OY (OY sound)UA (short A, or WA)UE (long U)UY (long I)* The vowels in piano or via or duo are not pairs, but pronounced separately.* The OY sound is a blend of three long vowels : O-I-E.
Vowel digraphs are 2 vowels that represent a single sound. They are ai, ay, ea, ee, ei, ey, ie, oa, oo, ow, and ue.
Any vowel from (a,o,u) combined with (e,i) will result in a dipthong if there is no acent mark, i.e. ae, ai, oe, oi, ue, ui. Admittedly, ai, oi, ue, and ui are more common than ae and oe.
Yes, the e sound is short in pet (noun and verb).
The four-letter English words ending with -ue are: ague, blue, clue, crue, flue, glue, grue, moue, plue, roue, slue, spue, true
The OO pair in room is a long U (long OO) sound, as in doom and bloom. This can also be made by O as in do and to (or in tomb), by U as in dune and flute, or by UE as in blue, clue, and sue.
the vowel-shift o-ue is common in Spanish. las ovas (feminine) = roe derived from los huevos = eggs