empty
Cello is a five letter word that sounds like six letters when pronounced. The letter c is pronounced ch to make the word sound like six letters.
empty
queue (sounds like the letter q)
There are no words in the english language that meet this rule, sorry. Although, I believe you phrased the question incorrectly. Perhaps you meant to ask this:What five letter word sounds the same way if you removed the last four letters.The answer is the word QUEUE, because it's pronounced "Q." So, naturally, if you remove the last four letters, you are left with the letter Q.
There is no meaning to any of the letters. Letters don't have meanings. The individual letters in a word don't mean anything. By themselves, they simply indicate what sound you're supposed to make. For example, the letter "s" indicates the s sound (which sounds like "ssssss") The letters in the English alphabet do not have meanings. Only the words that are made up of them do.
empty
The answer is the word empty. Take away the e and you have the letters mpty. Take away the p and you have the letters mty. Take away the y and you have the letters mt.
A letter is a single character that represents a sound (or sounds). An alphabet is a group of letters.
like the letter q, not cue-uee-uee did you know that queue is the only letter in the english language that still sounds the same when all the other 4 letters are removed?
Cello is a five letter word that sounds like six letters when pronounced. The letter c is pronounced ch to make the word sound like six letters.
Cello is a five letter word that sounds like six letters when pronounced. The letter c is pronounced ch to make the word sound like six letters.
The letter "s" is the 19th letter of the English alphabet. It is a voiceless alveolar fricative sound and is used to represent various sounds in words. In mathematics, "s" is often used to denote the side length of a square or the value of the arc length in trigonometry.
Letters are sounds. They cannot be cold.
empty
queue (sounds like the letter q)
empty
There are no words in the english language that meet this rule, sorry. Although, I believe you phrased the question incorrectly. Perhaps you meant to ask this:What five letter word sounds the same way if you removed the last four letters.The answer is the word QUEUE, because it's pronounced "Q." So, naturally, if you remove the last four letters, you are left with the letter Q.