Words with OR (four, form, force, horse) are pronounced as a long O with R in US English, and as oh-ah or oh-uh in British English, the same as many AW words.
Spelling of OR sound words - or, for / four, mourn / more, sore / oar, soar / door, floor
Some OR words : port, force, course, dorm, court, stork, mortal, torn, abort
Some AW words (same or similar in the UK) : law/lore, maw/more, caught/court, taut/tort
"Assonance" is the repetition of vowel sounds.
Words with hard vowel sounds include "cat," "dog," "top," "big," and "cup."
"Give" and "oddball" are not vowel words. Vowel words are words that contain a vowel as one of their main sounds. In "give," the main vowel sound is "i," a vowel; in "oddball," the main vowel sounds are "o" and "a," both vowels.
Initial vowel sound: apple, elephant, igloo Medial vowel sounds: banana, hello, tiger
A long vowel sound is one that says the name of the letter (U can be OO or YOO). The sounds are ay, ee, eye, oh, and oo/yoo. For example, age, ache and able are all long A words.
Vowel sounds connect and express the more numerous consonant sounds (which are the more specially shaped sounds) to create words. Vowel sounds are the oldest language sounds.
"Assonance" is the repetition of vowel sounds.
Consonance, as opposed to assonance of vowel sounds or alliteration of sounds at the beginning of words.
Words with hard vowel sounds include "cat," "dog," "top," "big," and "cup."
"Give" and "oddball" are not vowel words. Vowel words are words that contain a vowel as one of their main sounds. In "give," the main vowel sound is "i," a vowel; in "oddball," the main vowel sounds are "o" and "a," both vowels.
Initial vowel sound: apple, elephant, igloo Medial vowel sounds: banana, hello, tiger
No, but in words ending in "W", it often sounds like a vowel.
All words for vehicles have vowel sounds, if not vowels.
No, "A" is not considered a short vowel. "A" is a vowel that can make both short and long vowel sounds in English words.
A long vowel sound is one that says the name of the letter (U can be OO or YOO). The sounds are ay, ee, eye, oh, and oo/yoo. For example, age, ache and able are all long A words.
present when the words have the same ending constant vowel sound but the vowel sounds are different (perch-porch)
The word is "assonance." It refers to the repetition of identical or similar vowel sounds in neighboring or in close words.