The final E is silent, so the last sound is a schwa with the (ehl/uhl) sound.
The word taxi has a short A vowel sound, and a long E sound from the ending I.
Any single-syllable word ending in -ck has a short vowel sound. Yes, that one, too.
The word "can" contains the vowel sound /æ/, which is often represented by the letter "a." This sound is found in words like "cat" and "apple."
No. The I has a short i sound as in disk. The A has a schwa sound and the E is not heard (there is an ending unssound as in dunce).
No, the word "ladder" does not have a long vowel sound. The vowel sound in "ladder" is short.
No. The EA pair has a long E sound, and the ending E is silent (pleez).
An unstressed vowel is a vowel in the word you don't sound.
No, "door" and "today" do not rhyme. The vowel sounds at the end of each word are different, with "door" ending in the "r" sound and "today" ending in the "ay" sound.
The schwa vowel sound is the most common vowel sound in English, represented by the symbol ə. It is a short and neutral sound, similar to the 'uh' sound in words like "sofa" or "banana."
The word "rapid" has a short vowel sound. The "a" in "rapid" is pronounced as the short vowel sound "æ".
The word "menu" has a long vowel sound with the 'e' pronounced as 'ee'.
It is a schwa sound, an unstressed uh, eh, or ih.For a short A, the word ending would sound like AL in pal.For a long A, the word ending would rhyme with sale.