Yes. The A has a long A sound, and the E is silent.
Yes. The A has a long A sound, and the E is silent.
Yes. The A has a long A sound, and the E is silent.
The word "cane" has a long vowel sound, represented by the letter 'a'. In the word 'cane', the 'a' says its own name (long 'a' sound) instead of the short 'a' sound.
It has a long A sound and a silent E, to rhyme with lane and wane.
It has a short A, as in ban and man. The long A (ay) sound is heard in cane.
Yes. The A has a long A sound and the E is silent. It rhymes with cane and pain.
No. The A has a long sound as in cane and same. The E is silent.
Yes. The A is pronounced like that letter's name (ay), as in cane and sane. The E is silent.
Only one, a long A as in lane or came. The E is silent.
Yes: the short vowel sound for "a" occurs in the words have, bad, cat, and fan. The long vowel sound for "a" occurs in the words bay, cane, fail, and hate.
In the word "chain," the vowel sound is considered a long vowel. The letter "a" in "chain" is pronounced as /eɪ/, which is the long vowel sound for the letter "a." This is because it says its name, rather than a short sound like in "cat" or "mat."
Many times, adding an E (silent E) to the end of a word with vowel-consonant will create a long vowel word. Examples: sat - sate can - cane man - mane din - dine fin- fine dun - dune