If you are asking about diacritical marks used to gshow pronunciation in a traditional dictionary of English--and if you mean the vowel sound of "meet" as opposed to "met"--the the sound in "meet" is called a long "e" and is shown with a macron, or straight bar above the letter. The short "e" of "met" wild be shown with a symbol similar to a parenthesis ")" on its side, looking something like a smiling face.
HOWEVER, some modern dictionaries, even of English words for use by speakers of English (and also most bilingual dictionaries) now use International Phonetic Alphabet, and the vowel of English "meet" would be shown with the letter "i" while that of "met" would look sometiong like a mirror image of "3".
The words are from French where E can sound like A. In French they have the acute accent (é). They include puree, soiree, and fiancee (the feminine version of fiance), and the English past tense forms sauteed and pureed.
The primary accent in "urinary" is on the first syllable, pronounced as YUR-uh-ner-ee.
There is no short sound. The EE pair has a long E sound, as in she and heap.
The vowel sound in "creed" is the long "ee" sound, represented by the letter combination "ee".
The primary accent in the word "nominee" is on the second syllable, "no-MI-nee".
The words are from French where E can sound like A. In French they have the acute accent (é). They include puree, soiree, and fiancee (the feminine version of fiance), and the English past tense forms sauteed and pureed.
The primary accent in "urinary" is on the first syllable, pronounced as YUR-uh-ner-ee.
It's spelled the same, but it is important to note the accent when it is written in Spanish.México. Pronounced MEH - hee - koh.Same way. Mexico. The x in it is pronounced with an h sound though.México. The accent is important, or it would sound like meh-EE-co.
the y in oxygen is the letter that makes the ee sound
"Fleet feet sweep by sleeping geese" - Here, the repetition of the long "ee" sound creates assonance. "Mad as a hatter" - The repetition of the short "a" sound in the words "mad" and "hatter" is an example of assonance. "The cat sat on the mat" - The repetition of the short "a" sound in "cat" and "mat" creates assonance in this sentence.
A common kingfisher makes a sound something like "ee ee ee ee ee" In an extremely high pitched voice. Click this link below to here kingfisher calls for yourself.
There is no short sound. The EE pair has a long E sound, as in she and heap.
No it doesn't rhyme usually. It seriously matters how you say the endings and your accent.
Yes, a donkey does make a sound that sound similar to the letters 'ee aw'. It can sometimes sound like 'hee haw' as well.
The vowel sound in "creed" is the long "ee" sound, represented by the letter combination "ee".
The Hawaiian W is pronounced with a mild V sound- 3 syllables- accent goes on next to last syllable. Pronounce BOTH i's. ha-VAH-ee
The EE in beet is a long E, as in the homophone "beat." The EE is almost always a long E, a notable exception being the word "been" (bin), and words from French that end in a long A sound for EE.