Yes. The EA pair creates a long E sound, rhyming with defeat.
In the word "artichoke," the vowel sound in the second syllable, "choke," is indeed a long vowel sound. The "o" in "choke" is pronounced as /oʊ/, which is a long vowel sound. The first syllable, "arti," contains a short vowel sound. Therefore, only the second syllable has a long vowel.
"Climate" has a long vowel sound in the first syllable ("cli-") and a short vowel sound in the second syllable ("-mate").
Yes: the vowel in the first syllable (the stressed syllable) is a short E. However, the vowel Y in the second syllable has a long E sound.
The unstressed vowel in "parliament" is the second syllable, which is pronounced with a schwa sound /ə/. In phonetic transcription, it is often represented as /ˈpɑː.lɪ.mənt/, where the "a" in the second syllable is unstressed and pronounced as a neutral vowel sound.
No it's a short vowel sound. The A has a short sound as in cattle. The second syllable is a schwa.
Breathing has a long "e" sound in the first syllable and a short "i" sound in the second syllable.
No, the word tasteful does not have a short vowel sound in the first syllable. The vowel sound in the first syllable is the long A sound.
That is right; the second syllable is pronounced with a schwa.
No, "orange" is not a long vowel word. It has a short vowel sound for the first syllable, pronounced like "or," and the second syllable has a schwa sound like "un" in "button."
Yes, "guitar" has a short vowel sound in the second syllable "i" as in "git."
The schwa sound is in the second syllable (urd). It is an unstressed sound.
Yes, in the second syllable there is an /i:/