Analogy
Yes. Knot has a silent k in it just like know.
It is thought to be due to historical phonetic changes in the Latin language that carried over into English. The "ch" sound comes from a soft "k" sound in words borrowed from Greek, while the hard "k" sound remains in native Germanic words.
KHAI is pronounced as "kye" with a hard "K" sound followed by a long "I" sound.
In the word "discontinue," the letter "c" makes the /k/ sound.
There are actually numerous words that make the hard "c" sound and begin with a "k".A couple examples would be the words kite and kabob.When the vowels A, O, or U come after the letter "C", it will produce the "K" sound making it a hard "C".Some examples of words beginning with K and hard C:KaleidoscopeKickKilometricalKilometric
Yes, we do analogies.
k
Explanatory analogies Rhetorical analogies Both A and B
If it makes a k-k-k-k-k-k sound, then it might be that the battery's dead.
Celt has the k sound. Celery has the s sound.
the K sound aka a hard C sound K as in key
Resignation analogies
The last sound of the first syllable of the word "ricochet" is the "k" sound.
Yes sisqo tried to sound like k-ci
Yes. Knot has a silent k in it just like know.
There are 22 consontants in the Hebrew alphabet, but several of them have the same sound. For example, there are two different letters for the "k" sound. Modern Hebrew also has 4 additional foreign consonants: ז׳ צ׳ ג׳ and × ×’
An analogy is to compare something to something that is similar. An example would be to say something is as "clean as a baby's bottom".