The soft G has the J sound. The soft G will usually, but not always, take a soft sound when E, I, or Y comes after it.
The soft G has the J sound. The soft G will usually, but not always, take a soft sound when E, I, or Y comes after it.
gallantgenerousgenteelgentlegiftedglamorousgorgeousgraceful
games (used to improve language related skills)
hmmmmm......... grosse geese if you are trying to make a aliteration then it could be any word with the sound of g check in a dictionary
Enfamil and ear thermometer are baby items. They begin with the letter e.
Some candies that begin with the letter G are:GobstopperGoobersGumGummy ringsGummy bearsGummy worms
No, the word wagon has a hard g sound.Examples of words that have the hard g sound:GalaxyGameGardenGhostGiftGirlThe soft g sounds like the letter J. Examples of words that have the soft g sound:GemGerbilGestureGiantGingerGiraffe
796 words begin with the letter "g", according to WordHippo.
No, the word geese is pronounced with a hard g, not a soft g. The soft g is found in the words Germany, gyrate, region, etc.
Some soft g words you can make with the word "propaganda" are papa, panda, and pagan.
Hard G makes a guh sound. Soft G makes a J sound.Cage and page have the soft g sound.
awesome
Some words that begin with G:GainGallopGameGanderGateGauntletGazeGazeboGazelleGeeseGemGermGetGhostGhoulGiantGiftGiveGloatGlowGnuGoatGobsGodGoldGoneGoodGooseGopherGoreGorgeousGrabGrainGranolaGrapeGrapesGraspGrateGreasyGreatGreenGreetGriefGrimyGripGrossGroundGuacamoleGuardGuardianGuavaGumGunGushGutsGuyanaGym
Hard G makes a guh sound. Soft G makes a J sound.Some examples of Soft G (Sounds like J):AgeAngelBeigeBridgeBungeeCageChangeChargeCongestionCourageDangerDodgeDungeonEdgeEmergeEmergencyEngineEngineerForgeFragileFridgeGeneGeneralGenericGenerousGenreGiantGingerLargeMagicMargeMarginalMergePageRageRegionRidgeSageStageSturgeonSurgeSurgeonTragedyTragicUrgeVegetableWidget
Words that begin with b and end with g include: bag beg big bug beginning
'Germ' has a soft consonant sound at the beginning, because it is pronounced with a 'j' sound instead of a hard 'g.' An example of the latter would 'gone,' or 'great.' Another example of the former is, 'giant.'
garcon
grass