The A has a short sound (umlaut A, as in bar) and the AI has a short I sound.
(The gain does not sound like the word gain.)
The A is an umlaut A (short a followed by R) and the AI pair makes a short I sound (bar-ghin)
The repetition of vowel sounds within a word is called vowel rhyme.
The vowel sounds in the word "stencil" are /ɛ/ (as in "s t e n c i l").
Assonance is the term for the repetition of vowel sounds in nearby words, whereas alliteration is the repetition of consonant sounds.
In assonance similar vowel sounds are always located internally in a word.
No. Both the A and the I have short vowel sounds.
The short vowel "i" is in the word "dentist."
The long vowel sounds in "absentminded" are: "a" in "absent" "i" in "minded"
There is one long vowel sound in the word "idea," which is the letter "i."
The word "coins" has 2 vowel sounds: /ɔɪ/ and /ɪ/.
The word is "assonance." It refers to the repetition of identical or similar vowel sounds in neighboring or in close words.
The word "Lady" consists of two separate vowel sounds. Both vowel sounds are long. The long "A" sound and the long "E" sound.