"With" uses the unvoiced th sound.
The voiced TH makes a "D" sound. The examples of voiced TH are: 1.) The 2.) This 3.) There 4.) Than 5.) Then 6.) That 7.) They 8.) Other 9.) Another 10.) Gather 11.) Those 12.) Their
The "th" sound in the word "thimble" is voiceless. It is produced without vibration of the vocal cords.
The word digraph is a noun. The plural form is digraphs.
digraph
"Boat" is a word with a vowel digraph, with the "oa" representing a single vowel sound.
A digraph is short for directed graph.
Yes. Examples are "house", "abuse" and "use", in all of which the phoneme represented in the spelling by "s" is voiced when the word is a verb and unvoiced when the word is a noun. "(Read" changes its pronunciation based on tense.)
One example of a word containing the same digraph sound as "Philadelphia" is "elephant." The "ph" digraph in both words produces the same "f" sound.
tacit, implicit, silent, unvoiced
An unvoiced consonant.
A split digraph is when a vowel digraph is split by a consonant, such as the 'e' at the end of a word making the vowel say its name as in "time" or "hope." It occurs when an 'e' at the end of a word changes the short vowel sound to a long vowel sound.