Yes. The EA in beach has a long E sound, as in beat and reach. The word is a homophone of the tree name, beech.
The vowels "ee" as in "bee" and "ea" as in "beach" can make the long e sound.
Yes. The EA in teach has a long E sound, as in beach or speech.
Yes. The EA in teach has a long E sound, as in beach or speech.
The letters "ee" are used when the sound is a long "e" as in "bee" or "see." The letters "ea" are used when the sound is a long "e" as in "beach" or "teach."
It is a long E sound, as also made by EA in beach, peach, reach, and steal.
The vowel sound of beach (the letters ea) is the long e sound, as in the word me, or be. The b is pronounced as the letter b usually is, as in the word bat, big, etc. The ch sound is like the sound in the word choose, channel, peach, teach, etc. Beach rhymes with teach.
The EA pair is pronounced as a long E, to rhyme with beach, peach, teach, leech, and breech.
One should use "ee" in spelling when the sound is a long "e" as in "bee" or "see." One should use "ea" in spelling when the sound is a long "e" as in "beach" or "teach."
One should use "ee" in words when the sound is a long "e" as in "bee" or "see." One should use "ea" in words when the sound is a long "e" as in "beach" or "teach."
Yes. The EE pair has a long E sound as in cheep and cheap. The final E is silent.
No, the word 'game' does not have a long E sound. 'Game' has a long A sound, but the E is silent. The silent E is a clue that the A has a long A sound.
The word 'maybe' has the long E sound in 'be.' It also has a long A sound in the first syllable.