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.
Two consonants that blend together and lose their own individual sounds and create a new unique sound. for example: ch, sh, th chair, shape, though
A beginning blend consists of two consonants blended together at the beginning of a word, such as "bl" in "blend." A digraph is two consonants that make a single sound, such as "ch" in "chat."
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
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.
Two- or three-letter consonants, either beginning or ending, which make only one sound. These include th, wh, -ng, -nk, sh, ch, -tch, and qu.
The letter c is a consonant.The consonants ch make a distinctive sound different from the consonants th.Consonants and vowels make up words.
the strings rub together and make the sound
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