Reviewed and view
The 'ue' in "glue" represents a long vowel sound.
The vowel sound is a long U, specifically the YOO sound, which is seen in the rhyming word centrifuge. Other rhymes are scrooge, luge, and rouge. Other OO words include O words (do), EW words (stew, newt), UE words (clue, sue), and OU words such as (ghoul, coup, troupe).
The surname "Gue" is typically pronounced as "gyoo." The "G" has a soft sound like in "giraffe" and the "ue" is pronounced as "oo" like in "cue."
The OO pair in room is a long U (long OO) sound, as in doom and bloom. This can also be made by O as in do and to (or in tomb), by U as in dune and flute, or by UE as in blue, clue, and sue.
The word "bury" and its other forms (buried) are probably unique in this regard, although the UE pair in the words guess and guest also have a short E sound.
Vowel digraphs are 2 vowels that represent a single sound. They are ai, ay, ea, ee, ei, ey, ie, oa, oo, ow, and ue.
The 'ue' in "glue" represents a long vowel sound.
The vowel sound is a long U, specifically the YOO sound, which is seen in the rhyming word centrifuge. Other rhymes are scrooge, luge, and rouge. Other OO words include O words (do), EW words (stew, newt), UE words (clue, sue), and OU words such as (ghoul, coup, troupe).
words
The surname "Gue" is typically pronounced as "gyoo." The "G" has a soft sound like in "giraffe" and the "ue" is pronounced as "oo" like in "cue."
It depends on how you pronounce "tour." The R influences the OO sound, which sounds like the long OO in too followed by an (ur). Dictionaries show this as a short OO as in good and foot, but it is much closer to a long OO sound. The same sound appears in the words boor, poor (pour), and spoor. Words with a long OO include: U words with a silent E (tune, dude) UE words (due, clue) OU words (ghoul) Words with a YOO sound as in humid, human, mule, cute, feud, and fuel.
The OO pair in room is a long U (long OO) sound, as in doom and bloom. This can also be made by O as in do and to (or in tomb), by U as in dune and flute, or by UE as in blue, clue, and sue.
'League' has a confusing spelling, but it is just pronounced 'leeg', with a long E sound. (The EA sounds like a long E, the UE is silent.)
No such thing. Present tense verbs go e>ie, e>i, o>ue. Jugar goes u>ue, but it's the only one.
analogue, tongue, plague
affluentblueprintcongruentconfluencedelinquenteffluencefluentfuelinggruelinginfluencepuebloruefully
The word "bury" and its other forms (buried) are probably unique in this regard, although the UE pair in the words guess and guest also have a short E sound.