Queue or Q (as in waiting in a queue or the letter Q)
queue its pronouced just like the letter q and if you take out the "ueue" then its just q
The word queue sounds the same when you remove it's last four letters and leave only the Q.
aitch, queue
Aitch, queue
Queue
queue
Queue
queue aitch
The word queue is pronounced like the letter "q" in English language. Removing the last four letters of the word leaves that "q" behind. Queue is the same as "q" is.
tinier, retina, retain
This question really asks why English pronunciation appears to be inconsistent. English has its roots in a number of origins. Comb comes from Germanic roots, tomb from Latin to French to Middle English, and bomb from Greek to Latin to Italian to French.The history of a word lingers in its spelling and pronunciation, much as people retain their accents and other elements of their roots even when they have come a long way from where they began.
overall theme
After you open up the canned beans you have to warm them up and they will retain all of the original flavour when you eat
"You all and your managed object browser" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase voi e il vostro mob browser. The second person informal plural pronoun, conjunction, masculine singular definite article and pronoun, and English loan words model a feature of Italian whereby technology may retain its original spelling -- in this case -- or take on a translated equivalent, such as navigatore oggetto gestito. The pronunciation will be "voy ey eel VO-stro mohb BROO-ser" in Italian.
of course! PSLE English is a huge affect on your future . if u fail your english , u will either retain ! tuuutuuttutu
tenous, retain, contain,
They do. Toyota Matsuda Nissan but they do not write in Japanese letters. they retain their Japanese names. but writing using letters of the alphabet. to be easily understood by everyone
Yes.
In Modern English, pronouns in the third person singular retain gender: his, hers, he, her, she, and him.