Some words that have the same ending sound as who and to are:blewbluebrewcluechewcluecoocoupcrewcuedewdodrewdueeweflewflufluegluegnugoogrewhewhueknewlieuloomewmoonewpewphewpoohqueuerouxruescrewshoeshooshrewskewslewspewstewstrewsuethrewthroughtootruetwoviewwooyewyouzoo
words that sound like shun
Razzle dazzle and a few more words with z and l in them:analyzeapologizeazaleabamboozleblazeblintzblitzBrazilbulldozercalzonecivilizationdrizzleembezzlefertilizefizzlefloozyfrazzlegazellegazillionglazeglitzgrizzlyguzzlehazelhorizontalinfluenzajezebelklutzlazymuzzlenozzlenuzzleparalyzeplazapolarizepretzelpuzzlerealizeschmaltzschnitzelseltzersizzlesleazyspaetzleswizzletantalizeutilizewaltzzealzillion
Some six letter words starting with A and ending with L are:actualassailanimalartfularmfulannual
Some words to describe a friend that start with L are likable, loyal, and lovely.
The Japanese language has no l sound.
No. Words with a double L have an AW sound (caret O) for the A, so that all is a homophone for "awl." The short A sound is heard in words such as pal and gallon.
No, the words "salt" and "sought" are not homophones. They are pronounced differently, with "salt" having an "aw" sound and "sought" having an "o" sound.
Not exactly. Although the L is not distinctly sounded in some dialects, its presence affects the sound of the O, making it OAK. You can see this in the AWK sound in "talk" and the AW sound in "solder." The L is actually silent in the words salmon, calf, half, could, and would.
I believe it's not "Asians", per se, but Japanese - their language does not have a "L" sound in it, so when they have to pronounce words in English with an "L" they do the best they can. *EDIT*
Since alliteration refers to a string of words all starting with the same sound, any word beginning with the "m" sound will alliterate with moon.
The r/l phonemes in Korean are not distinct as they might be in English. Instead, they are often pronounced somewhere in between the two sounds. You can find this sound in words like 라면 (ramen) or 리더 (leader). It's important to note that this sound is a blend between r and l and may not perfectly match either sound.
A syllable normally has exactly one vowel sound. However, some words have disconnected consonant sounds such as a sibilant S or a Z, such as is seen in some plurals. Some dictionaries will indicate a schwa sound before an L as just the letter L. (as in rattle)
pollo a la parrilla. The two L's in Spanish sound like a Y.
Most words with A followed by a double L give the A an "AW" sound, so that ball and call rhyme with brawl and crawl. This is technically a "caret O" sound, not an A.
Yes, "lucky to linger" is an example of alliteration because of the repetition of the "l" sound at the beginning of both words.
<sl> is two sounds. "s" and "l". slop slob slab slip slug slim slap Each of those words has 4 sounds.