heard, furred and depending on your accent then chaired and cared
One set of homophones that involve birds is "tern" (a type of bird) and turn.
No. It has a long I vowel sound and a schwa for the -er.
No. The A has a long A vowel sound, as in caper. The -er is a schwa sound.
Shirt has a short vowel sound. The sound is the [ər] category. It includes vowels with er, ur, ir, or, ar, and ear sounds. Examples are serve, curl, bird, doctor, dollar, and hearth.
The second E has a schwa (er/ur) vowel sound.
The A has a long A sound, and the -er is a schwa (unstressed er/ur sound).
No. The I has a long I sound, and the -er has a schwa sound.
Shirt has a short vowel sound. The sound is the [ər] category. It includes vowels with er, ur, ir, or, ar, and ear sounds. Examples are serve, curl, bird, doctor, dollar, and hearth.
No. The I has a long I vowel sound and a schwa for the -er.
No. The I has a long I sound, and the -er has a schwa sound.
It has a long O vowel sound, and a schwa -er (ur).
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
No. The A has a long A sound as in range, and the -er is a schwa sound.