"Hear" doesn't have an "a" sound at all; it has a long "e" sound.
The word "hear" has a long 'ee' sound, so the 'a' is pronounced with a short 'e' sound.
In the word "cape," the letter "a" makes a long A sound, which is the sound you hear in the word "cake."
It has a caret I sound, which is indistinguishable from a long E in US English.
Hear has a type of long E called a caret I (eer) because it makes the same sound as the letters (ir).
No. It is a long O (and a silent E). You can hear the (oh) sound.
The word "hear" has a long vowel sound for the vowel "e".
The word 'bone' does not have a long or a short e sound in it. It does have an e at the end, but that e is silent so you don't hear that sound at all.
long vowel because the o you can even hear it the long o sound in moment that's my awser
No. The I has a short vowel sound as in mill and silk. Ask yourself, when you say it or hear it, do you hear the sound, "EYE" or do you hear the sound, "Ih?" Long vowels make their sound - for I, if you hear "EYE" you know it is a long vowel in this word. Long Vowel Words (A,E,I,O,U) cake beep high mow unit Short Vowel Words (a,e,i,o,u) act bet sick odd but
The word "hear" has a long vowel sound for the letter 'e', pronounced like "here."
No. The EA has an R-shaped long E sound (caret I) as in deer and here.
It has a long E and a silent E at the end. It is pronounced the same as hear.