English Grammar in Familiar Lectures by Samuel Kirkham
page 50 of 462 (10%)
page 50 of 462 (10%)
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_dull, custard_; and an obtuse sound; as in _full, bushel_. It is
pronounced like short _e_ in _bury_; and like short _i_ in _busy, business_. V.--_V_ has uniformly the sound of flat _f_; as in _vanity, love_. W.--_W_, when a consonant, has its sound, which is heard in _wo, beware_. _W_ is silent before _r_; as in _wry, wrap, wrinkle_; and also in _answer, sword_, &c. Before _h_ it is pronounced as if written after the _h_; as in _why, when, what_;--_hwy, hwen, hwat_. When heard as a vowel, it takes the sound of _u_; as in _draw, crew, now_. X.--_X_ has a sharp sound, like _ks_, when it ends a syllable with the accent on it; as, _exit, exercise_; or when it precedes an accented syllable which begins with any consonant except _h_; as, _excuse, extent_; but when the following accented syllable begins with a vowel or _h_, it has, generally, a flat sound, like _gz_; as in _exert, exhort_. _X_ has the sound of _Z_ at the beginning of proper names of Greek original; as in _Xanthus, Xenophon, Xerxes_. Y.--_Y_, when a consonant, has its proper sound; as in _youth, York, yes, new-year_. When _y_ is employed as a vowel, it has exactly the sound that _i_ would have in the same situation; as in _rhyme, system, party, pyramid_. Z.--_Z_ has the sound of flat _s_; as in _freeze, brazen_. RULES FOR SPELLING. |
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