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listen to each word. which two words have the same vowel sound?

Question

listen to each word. which two words have the same vowel sound?

Explanation:

Response

To solve this, we analyze the vowel sounds of the words associated with the images:

  1. The first image (dog in mud) likely represents "mud" (vowel sound /ʌ/).
  2. The second image (mice/rats) likely represents "mice" or "rats"? Wait, no—wait, "mice" has /aɪ/, but "rat" or "mouse"? Wait, no, correction: "mud" ( /ʌ/ ), "mice" ( /aɪ/ ) is wrong. Wait, the second image: mice? No, maybe "mice" is /aɪ/, but the first is "mud" ( /ʌ/ ), the third is "rub" (from the hand wiping, "rub" has /ʌ/). Wait, no—wait, the first image: dog in mud → "mud" (vowel /ʌ/). The third image: hand wiping → "rub" (vowel /ʌ/). The second image: mice ( /aɪ/ ) or "mouse" ( /aʊ/ )? Wait, no—wait, "mud" and "rub" both have the vowel sound /ʌ/. Wait, but the second image: maybe "mice" ( /aɪ/ ) is different. Wait, no—wait, the first image is "mud" ( /ʌ/ ), the third is "rub" ( /ʌ/ ), so those two (mud and rub) have the same vowel sound. But the images: first is mud (dog in mud), third is rubbing (hand with cloth). The second is mice (or rats? No, mice is /aɪ/). Wait, maybe the first is "mud" ( /ʌ/ ), third is "rub" ( /ʌ/ ), so the first and third images’ words have the same vowel sound.

Wait, but the problem is to identify which two words (from the three images) have the same vowel sound. Let's re-express:

  • Image 1: Dog in mud → word "mud" (vowel /ʌ/).
  • Image 2: Mice (or rats? No, mice is /aɪ/; "mouse" is /aʊ/). Wait, maybe the second image is "mice" ( /aɪ/ ), which is different.
  • Image 3: Hand wiping → word "rub" (vowel /ʌ/).

Thus, "mud" (image 1) and "rub" (image 3) have the same vowel sound ( /ʌ/ ).

But wait, maybe the second image is "mice" ( /aɪ/ ), so the first (mud) and third (rub) match.

So the two words (from image 1 and image 3) have the same vowel sound.

Brief Explanations

The words associated with the first (mud) and third (rub) images share the vowel sound /ʌ/, while the second image’s word (e.g., “mice”) has a different vowel sound. Thus, the first and third images’ words have the same vowel sound.

Answer:

The words from the first (dog in mud) and third (hand wiping) images (e.g., “mud” and “rub”) have the same vowel sound.