No. Words with a double L have an AW sound (caret O) for the A, so that all is a homophone for "awl." The short A sound is heard in words such as pal and gallon.
No. The AL is pronounced as "all" with an AW sound (caret O), which is neither short or long.
It has neither. Most words with -all have the AW sound, as in bawl and crawl.
yes it does, all the a in that word is short
"Hear" doesn't have an "a" sound at all; it has a long "e" sound.
Yes, the word "fall" has a short a vowel sound. The a in fall is pronounced as /ɔ/ (as in "all").
Yes, all the words "back," "sat," and "wanted" have the short 'a' sound.
In US English, most -all words have a caret O or AW sound, to rhyme with haul and bawl. This is neither a short or long A sound. The short A is heard in gal and pal.
No, the words "batch" and "hand" do not have the same vowel sound. "Batch" has the short 'a' sound (/æ/), while "hand" has the short 'a' sound as well (/æ/).
All the vowels are short in 'enemy'.
It has a short I sound.
The A has a short A sound, and the I has a short I sound.
Yes, the i in pit has a short vowel sound.