That is called consonance. Consonance is the repetition of consonant sounds at the end of words in close proximity.
Consonant variants are consonants having 2 or more sounds.Example:c- /s/ cereal, ceremony/k/ calculator, candle
was it called Ludo? I remember having that game as a child and it was similar to Bingo.
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These are words where the letter Y is a vowel or in a vowel pair.Words ending in consonant-Yby, cry, dry, fry, my, pry, shy, spry, try, whyWords having or ending in UYbuy, guy,Words containing consonant-YExamples: byline, cyberspace, cytology, dye, gyrate, hygiene, lye, lyre, nylon, pyrite, rye, type, zygoteThe -ing form of -ie words (avoids 2 I's)dying, lying, tying, vying
The vowel in "buzz' is a schwa, neither "long" nor "short" (inadequate terms to describe English vowels). Whether the syllable having a schwa vowel is long or short itself depends on whether its final consonant is voiced or unvoiced, respectively. Having the voiced zz for a final consonant, buzz is long syllable.
Having two similar alleles for a trait is called being homozygous. It is possible to be homozygous for a dominant or recessive trait.
The term "distance" is typically pronounced as "vcv," where "v" stands for a vowel sound and "c" stands for a consonant sound. In this case, the breakdown is as follows: the first syllable "dis" has a consonant-vowel structure (c-v), and the second syllable "tance" follows a vowel-consonant pattern (v-c). Thus, "distance" can be described as having a vcv structure overall.
In "Spark" by Alice Broadway, the ending sees the protagonist, Lei, coming to terms with her past and embracing her identity and strengths. She finds closure and a sense of new beginnings while also having a better understanding of the world around her.
fraction having a common denominator
generally speaking, in English, words with the short 'i' sound can be recognized by the fact of having two consonants immediately after the letter 'i'. viz: fir (short 'i'), vs fire (long 'i') almost always of the form: (consonant, 'i', consonant, consonant) Thus: firm, firmament, gird, girder, hilt, filter, and so on. Also, the letter 'i' followed by a final consonant is always the short sound. viz: clip, grip, slip, hip, lip, rip, sip, tip, and so on.
please someone smart answer this question it is for school and I am having problems with it