Yes. The E has a short E sound as in bet or bed.
No. The word met has a short E vowel sound. (The long E is in meet, meat, or mete.)
If you are speaking of the second syllable, yes, it has a short e sound, like the e in men.
Yes, the E is a short E sound (as in met), and the A is an unstressed sound (met-ul).If the vowel is long, it sounds like the letter E, as in meet.
No. The E in egg has a short E sound as in beg and keg.
Yes. The E is a short E as in the rhyming words met, net, and pet.
No. It has a short E sound, as in met. It rhymes with den and then.
An "e" with a long sound is pronounced like "ee" (as in "me"), which is longer in duration than the short "e" sound (as in "met").
Yes, the word "tent" contains a short vowel sound. The "e" in "tent" is pronounced quickly, similar to the short "e" sound in words like "met" or "set." This short vowel sound distinguishes it from words with a long "e" sound, like "teen" or "team."
Yes, the word 'net' does have the short e sound. Some other words that have the same sound and rhyme with 'net' are set, pet, let, met, get, and bet.
No. The E in met is a short E, as in bet and let. The long E is seen in the homophones meat, meet, or mete. The long vowels sound the way the letters are pronounced.
The "e" in method has a short vowel sound. The "o" is neither long nor short: it is in an unstressed syllable and has the schwa sound.
Yes. It is a short E sound as in met and hen. It rhymes with the words den, pen, and then.