Yes, the "o" sound in "open" is a long vowel.
No, the word "open" does not have a long vowel. It is pronounced with a short /o/ sound.
The word "hello" has an open syllable. An open syllable ends in a vowel sound and usually has a long vowel sound. In "hello," the first syllable "hel" ends in a long vowel sound.
"Cave" is an open syllable word because it ends with a vowel sound, which makes the vowel sound long.
An open syllable is a syllable that ends in a vowel sound, typically making a long vowel sound. Examples include "be" and "to."
Yes, "Investigate" is an open syllable word because the last syllable has a long vowel sound (gate) and ends in a vowel.
The word "open" has the vowel sound /oʊ/ (as in the word "cone").
No he she me sky hi ...any word that does not have a consonant after the vowel leaving the vowel to make its long sound.
No he she me sky hi ...any word that does not have a consonant after the vowel leaving the vowel to make its long sound.
The word open has two vowels; the O is long, the E is a weak sound.
The letter "e" in the word "bean" is considered a short vowel sound because it says its short sound /e/ as in "bed."
In RP, the o in coffee is a short open back vowel /ˈkɒf.i/ , whereas in General American speech one often hears either a long open back vowel /ˈkɑ.fi/ or a long mid back vowel /ˈkɔ.fi/ Wiktionary offers two audio fragments that illustrate this difference
It has one long vowel (E) and one schwa sound.
The word "ruby" has a long vowel sound for the letter "u" which is pronounced "oo" like in "blue" or "true".
Loser long or short vowel
It has a long vowel sound.
It has a long vowel sound.
The long vowel sound in the word "title" is the "i" sound, pronounced like "IE" in words such as "pie" or "lie."
is aim a long vowel or short vowel