1. them
2. fell
3. ten
Yes. The E is a short E sound as in hem and men.
Homonyms for "hem" include: Hem - the edge or border of a piece of clothing that is folded and sewn Hem - to hesitate or falter in speech Hem - a verb used to surround or enclose something with a border or edge
Short E refers to the "eh" sound you hear when you say words like bed, wet, wreck, and hem. Some longer words with that sound are lemming, torrent, and embarrass.
The plural of hem is hems.
The past tense of hem is "hemmed".
Yes. The E is a short E sound as in hem and men.
Yes the word 'them' does have a short e sound. Some other words with the same sound are bet, hem, and deck.
Yes, it is the "eh" sound, as in test and sent.Yes, the word 'tent' does have a short e sound. A few other words that have the same sounds are deck, hem, and pet.
A homophone for the word "hymn" is "him." A homophone is a word that is pronounced the same as another word but has a different meaning.
The word "hem" is in the King James Version of the Bible 7 times. It is in 6 verses.
Yes. The E is a short E sound as in hem and men.
Homonyms for "hem" include: Hem - the edge or border of a piece of clothing that is folded and sewn Hem - to hesitate or falter in speech Hem - a verb used to surround or enclose something with a border or edge
Yes I can actually.... (Hem-Hem): "I wish you would stop telling me what to do."
The Swedish word for home is "hem"
Bethléhem
Short E refers to the "eh" sound you hear when you say words like bed, wet, wreck, and hem. Some longer words with that sound are lemming, torrent, and embarrass.
In Hebrew, object pronouns are suffixes. So the word for "him" would depend on the word right before it. For example: to him = lo (לו) from him = mimenu (×ž×™×ž× ×•) with him = ito (איתו) on him = alav (עליו)