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A chiming sound
S makes a Z sound. Pri-zim.
jingling
Snow and strong winds are mixed together to make a blizzard.
When you hit it, it yells in pain.
A digraph. A digraph is when two consonants make one sound. "Ch," "sh," and "th" are other examples.
You can simulate an unstressed vowel by pronouncing the consonants B and M together. The "uh" sound you hear is the schwa, which can sound like eh, ih, or uh and can be used with consonants such as R (uhr) and T (et/it/ut), where any of the three sounds may be heard in a particular dialect.
The letter c is a consonant.The consonants ch make a distinctive sound different from the consonants th.Consonants and vowels make up words.
Alliteration
Why don't you look at your question a little closer? I see two words that start with consonant blends. Instead of pronouncing the initial consonants separately, they are blended together. Try pronouncing them together and seeing how they sound.
It is called a consonant blend or a digraph A consonant blend is when two or more consonants appear together and you hear each sound that each consonant would normally make. -- As in fingerprint A digraph is when the two letters represent a single sound. -- As in fang If described according to it's point of articulation it is a velar nasal consonant
the strings rub together and make the sound
is lots on sound put together to make a big sound for E.g. if you was making a sound montage of a classroom you would have to think of all the sounds you can hear in a classroom then put them together to make a sound montage
No,a vowel in the English language is a letter. There are five, a,e,i,o, and u. These letters are connectors for the consonants. Together, consonants and vowels, make up words. The word square has two vowels, a and e.
movement
Wild Colt words: words with i and o followed by two consonants --the vowels make the long sound (example: blind and cold).
Grass Hoppers make sound buy rubbing there back legs together