No, the word "together" does not have a short 'g' sound. It is pronounced with a 'th' sound at the beginning, followed by a short 'uh' sound, and then a 'th' sound again.
The EA pair has a short E sound. The second e is a schwa.
"Gledelig" is pronounced as "glei-deh-lig." The "g" is pronounced as a soft "g" similar to the "y" in "yes," the "e" is pronounced as a short "e" sound, and the "i" is pronounced as a long "i" sound.
No, the word 'you' does not have the short e sound. The ou together in this word make a long u sound. *This question asked about the word 'we' which does have a long E sound - the site software changed this 'we' to 'you' which obviously has no E in it.
"Ilg" is pronounced as "ilg" (/ɪlg/), with a short "i" sound followed by the "l" and "g" sounds.
It is pronounced as "goddag" with a soft 'g' sound at the beginning, similar to the English word "good," followed by a short 'o' sound and ending with a soft 'd' sound.
gilet
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No, the word 'you' does not have the short e sound. The ou together in this word make a long u sound. *This question asked about the word 'we' which does have a long E sound - the site software changed this 'we' to 'you' which obviously has no E in it.
The EA pair has a short E sound. The second e is a schwa.
The A has a short A sound, as in can and lamp.
It is a hard G.
No, the word 'leash' is not a short E word. The E and A together in this word make the long E sound, as in beach, so that leash more or less rhymes with quiche and pastiche. There are words where the E and A together do make the short E sound. Some of those words are thread, bread, and head.
The A has a short A sound, and the I has a short I sound.
No, "pit" does not have a short "i" sound. It has a short "i" sound followed by the unvoiced "t" sound.
No. It has a short A sound and a short I sound (man-ij). The E has no sound.
Bugle has a long "oo" sound, which is pronounced like "boo-gul."
No, tack does not have a short "a" sound. It is pronounced with a short "a" sound as in "cat."