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.
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.
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, in the second syllable there is an /i:/