City, citation for a start.
celery, citation, cymbols, cynical, cement, coeruleum, center, cedar, certain, etc.
Make a list of words with the vowel sound(at least five words for each vowel)underline the vowel in each word
'Us', 'has' and 'phase' are three examples. us is NOT an example. the word us makes the s sound, not the z sound unless you speak with a blaccent. has and phase are examples though however here are some more; is, use, praise, raise, ways, laser,
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.
scythe
scenic, science, scent
The s in "asphalt" is pronounced as a z sound, similar to the sound in words like "zero" or "zebra."
occipital
City, citation for a start.
parties, cookie/s, field/s movie/s and brief
sound in a poem can be created using onomatopoeia - words that sound like the action such as "bang" "crash". It can also be created through assonance - this is the repetition of a vowel sound in words so you get a soft s or c ect.. Sound can be created through alliteration : the snake slowly slithered- the s is the alliteration.
The C in cinnamon has the soft c sound which sounds like the letter s.Examples:CeleryCentipedeCinnamonCircleCircusCityCylinderThe above words all begin with C and sound like S.
Celt has the k sound. Celery has the s sound.
Sounds such as /s/, /z/, /ʃ/, /ʒ/, /t͟ʃ/, and /d͡ʒ/ can be identified as an "s" sound for forming plurals. This includes sounds like /s/, /z/, /t͟ʃ/, and /d͡ʒ/ found in words like "cats," "dogs," "buses," and "pajamas."
it is like wize.
You use a. Use an only with words that start with a vowel sound.A word that starts with s cannot start with a vowel sound, unless the s is actually pronounced like the name of the letter, which is not common. For example, you would say an S-hook, because that would be pronounced an ess-hook. However, for "normal" words that start with s, the article a is correct, as in a serious problem or a sock.