No. The word cape has a long A (ay) sound and a silent E, as in gape and tape.The short A sound is heard in the word cap.
Yes, the word "cape" is pronounced with a short a sound, like in the word "cat."
No, the word "cape" does not have a long vowel sound. The letter "a" in "cape" is pronounced with a short vowel sound, like the "a" in "cat" or "bat".
In the word "cape," the letter "a" makes a long A sound, which is the sound you hear in the word "cake."
The word "cape" has a long a sound.
No, the vowel sound in "cap" is a short "a" sound, as in "cat" or "bat."
The first A has a long A sound and the second is a schwa.
No, the word "cape" does not have a long vowel sound. The letter "a" in "cape" is pronounced with a short vowel sound, like the "a" in "cat" or "bat".
No. The a is a long a in cape; the e is silent.
In the word "cape," the letter "a" makes a long A sound, which is the sound you hear in the word "cake."
The word "cape" has a long a sound.
No, the vowel sound in "cap" is a short "a" sound, as in "cat" or "bat."
The first A has a long A sound and the second is a schwa.
Yes, the word "tape" has a short e sound represented by the phonetic symbol /eɪ/.
Cave has a long a vowel sound, pronounced as /keɪv/.
Yes, "cake" is a short word consisting of only four letters.
The word grape has a long A and silent E, to rhyme with cape and tape.
The OR in horse has a caret O sound (long O + R). The E is silent. *In British English the OR has the AW sound rather than a long O (ore) sound.
The Cape of Good Hope Province, Cape Province for short.