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 '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.
It is the short e sound