It is a long O vowel sound (and a silent E).
Yes. Both have a long O sound (and a silent E).
Technically, vowels are not defined as long or short, but their sounds are, because various vowels can sound like other vowels, alone or in pairs. The "short" vowels have a truncated sound. short A (ah) - apple, cat, sad short E (eh) - bed, let, ten short I (ih) - bill, mix, sit short O (aah) - cot, nod, top short U (uh) - up, bud, nut short OO - book, good, foot, put The "long" vowels say their name (ay, ee, eye, oh, yoo or oo). long A (ay) - day, name, main, eight long E (ee) - be, knee, mean, seat, genie (2) Long I (eye) - sign, kite, why, guy, night long O (oh) - go, woe, cold, moan, rode long U (yoo or oo) - due, cute, feud, fuel, mule, pupil, view / dune, flute, suit long OO - same sound - moon, cool, loose, boot
Homophones are words the sound the same but are spelled differently. So if we are talking about a long cylinder, we call it a pole whereas taking a survey can be known as a poll. So the pronunciation [pohl] can be used to describe a long cylinder, or a survey.
The homophones for "rowed" are "road" and "rode".
Homophones for "rode" include road and rowed. Homophones for "pairs" include pears and pares.
Yes. Both have a long O sound (and a silent E).
No. When two vowels are next to each other, the general phonics rule is to pronounce the long sound of the first vowel while the second is silent. Beast = Bēst or "Beest" Road = Rōd or "Rode" Weird = Wērd or "Weerd" There are, of course, exceptions, but this is the general rule.
Technically, vowels are not defined as long or short, but their sounds are, because various vowels can sound like other vowels, alone or in pairs. The "short" vowels have a truncated sound. short A (ah) - apple, cat, sad short E (eh) - bed, let, ten short I (ih) - bill, mix, sit short O (aah) - cot, nod, top short U (uh) - up, bud, nut short OO - book, good, foot, put The "long" vowels say their name (ay, ee, eye, oh, yoo or oo). long A (ay) - day, name, main, eight long E (ee) - be, knee, mean, seat, genie (2) Long I (eye) - sign, kite, why, guy, night long O (oh) - go, woe, cold, moan, rode long U (yoo or oo) - due, cute, feud, fuel, mule, pupil, view / dune, flute, suit long OO - same sound - moon, cool, loose, boot
No. The E is not pronounced in -ed words such as rowed (long O) or plowed (OU sound). This can be compared to the silent E as in rode and code.
The spelling "rode" is the past tense of to ride.The sound-alike word is "road" (a path for vehicles).
The boy rode on an elephant. ( "an" is used as "a" onlt when the word after it starts witha vowel )
Record how long you rode for, where you went, what you did, what horse you rode, what you learned (if you're a greenhorn just learning how to ride), whether you rode Western or English, etc.
He was to short to ride a horse. He just rode a mule.
Cavalry
people from a long time ago
3 hours
i rode a bike i rode my bike this weekend