No. The EY have a long E sound, as in gurney or attorney.
Yes, the word "key" has a short e sound. It is pronounced as /kiΛ/.
Yes, the word "key" has a short e sound, making it a short vowel word.
Long E. The EY pair in key sounds like "ee" not "eh."
"Threat" has a short e sound.
Short e sound: "bed", "let", "red" Long e sound: "bee", "key", "tea" Sentence with short e sound: "She let her dog sleep on the bed." Sentence with long e sound: "The bee buzzed around the key and landed on a flower."
No. The E has a long E sound, as in he, me, and we.
No, red does not have a short e sound. The "e" in red is pronounced like the short "e" sound.
No. It has a short A sound and a short I sound (man-ij). The E has no sound.
In the word "credit," the vowel 'e' has a short vowel sound. It is pronounced as "reh-dit."
"Threat" has a short e sound.
Yes, "repetition" has a long E sound in the last syllable, pronounced as "re-puh-TI-shun."
Yes. The E has a short E sound as in net and test.
No. There is a short U sound, and the A has a short I sound, but the E is silent.
No. There is no E or E sound. The I has a short I sound and the A is a schwa-R (ur).
Yes, "intend" has a short u sound as in "tin" or "win."
Yes. The first E has a short E sound as in enable or endure. The I has a short I sound and the final E is silent.
Yes, the word "vest" has a short e sound, pronounced as /vΙst/.
No. The E is silent, although the A has a short A sound as in has and had.