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m a j o r
There are quite a few words that start with an A and end with an R. Some examples of these words are, another, admirer, amateur, and aviator.
The O sound is a short U (uh) shaped by the R, called a caret U. It is seen in the words birth and earth. The I sound is a long I sound as in the words mile, high, try, and lie. The E is silent.
The E in her has the "caret U" sound, a short U + R. The sound appears in few non-R words. U words - fur, curl, urge, hurt E words - were, fern, prefer, term I words - bird, stir, third, dirt, firm, dirge, squirt O words - word, worm EA words - heard, learn, pearl
The A sound in charm is called a caret A which in US English makes the sound of an R, and in British English is closer to an AW sound. The sound is seen in most -ar words, such as bar, card, dark, and farm.
No, if you pronounce it with an 'R', then you are from the South of the UK. If you pronounce it without the 'R' sound, then you are probably from the North.
The Japanese language has no l sound.
Of the 7 words, all have the long EE sound. For the leading syllables, there are 2 that have R-shaped vowels, 3 short sound words, and 2 are long. thirteen - caret U (short U + R) fourteen - caret O (OR sound, sometimes long O) fifteen - short I sound sixteen - short I sound seventeen - short E sound, schwa sound eighteen - long A sound nineteen - long I vowel
Yes, the word "are" has a vowel sound. The letter "a" in "are" is pronounced as the schwa sound, which is a vowel sound.
The letter "h" is silent when it follws "g", "k", "r" at the beginning of the words. Example: ghost - khaki - rhubarb - rhyme - rhythm.
Words such as bar, car, and start are not considered 'short a' words but are indicated by an "umlaut A" symbol where the A is said to be "R-shaped." It appears in one pronunciation of the word "father" as a British English homophone of the word "farther" because the R is not heard (fah-thuh). Similarly, there is a long A sound followed by an R that is called a caret A, which is the "air" sound in US English (fair, care).
Not technically. Although the letter E can be heard, the sound is R-shaped and is indicated by a caret I. Most caret I words have an "ear" sound.