Some words that end in the letters DY with a long E are listed below:
candy bandy dandy sandy brandy handy
daddy faddy caddy
hardy
bawdy gaudy
bloody
burgundy
cloudy rowdy
eddy heady ready steady thready teddy
giddy kiddy
greedy needy weedy speedy
body anybody nobody somebody embody antibody busybody
shoddy toddy
comedy parody melody custody rhapsody remedy raggedy
muddy ruddy
trendy bendy
foolhardy tardy
lady shady landlady
subsidy
sturdy
In "silent E" words such as bite, mite, site, white, the E ending changes the sound of the short I to a long I. There are no English words where a final single E sounds like a long I. However, there are IE words such as die, pie, lie, and vie, and YE endings such as bye and dye.
Yes, both "bike" and "kite" have long I sounds. The letter "i" is pronounced as /aɪ/ in both words.
Some examples of words with a long i vowel sound are: kite, time, like, and lime.
There are I words with a silent E, such as bite, dime, and while. There are I words spelled with GH such as high, sigh, light, and right. There are I words that begin with the prefix bi- which virtually always sounds like BY, or tri- which sounds like TRY. Examples are binary, bimonthly, and trimester.
Rain and cape have long A sounds; ran and cap have short A's. Bead and neat have long E sounds; bed and net have short E's. Pile and ride have long I sounds; pill and rid have short I's. Hope and wrote have long O sounds; hop and rot have short O's. Mute and pure have long U sounds; mutt and purr have short U's.
In "silent E" words such as bite, mite, site, white, the E ending changes the sound of the short I to a long I. There are no English words where a final single E sounds like a long I. However, there are IE words such as die, pie, lie, and vie, and YE endings such as bye and dye.
Yes. The ending OW sounds like a long O (oh).
"Realize" and "why" do not rhyme because they have different ending sounds. "Why" ends with a long "i" sound, while "realize" ends with a short "i" sound. In order for two words to rhyme, they need to have similar ending sounds.
These are words from French, such as cliche, passe, fiance, fiancee, puree, and saute.They are obvious without the acute e (é) but it may be needed for résumé (resumé) to differentiate it from the verb resume.
Yes, both "bike" and "kite" have long I sounds. The letter "i" is pronounced as /aɪ/ in both words.
Some examples of words with a long i vowel sound are: kite, time, like, and lime.
There are I words with a silent E, such as bite, dime, and while. There are I words spelled with GH such as high, sigh, light, and right. There are I words that begin with the prefix bi- which virtually always sounds like BY, or tri- which sounds like TRY. Examples are binary, bimonthly, and trimester.
Rain and cape have long A sounds; ran and cap have short A's. Bead and neat have long E sounds; bed and net have short E's. Pile and ride have long I sounds; pill and rid have short I's. Hope and wrote have long O sounds; hop and rot have short O's. Mute and pure have long U sounds; mutt and purr have short U's.
No, the words then and there do not have long e sounds. Then has a short e, and there, rhymes with air, has a short a.
Some examples of critical vowel sounds with the long "i" sound include words like "cry," "flight," "pie," and "sight." These words feature the "i" sound pronounced as a long vowel with the "i" sound.
Words that have the letter "e" but sound like "a" are known as "long a" vowel sounds. Examples include "ate," "cake," and "made." In these words, the letter "e" is followed by a silent "e" or another vowel that changes its pronunciation to the long "a" sound.
yes, as long as the ending sounds the same.