The first E has a short e sound, the second is unstressed (schwa or uh sound).
Long E = sleep seem peep short E= sled mend tend lend send then
No. The long 'e' sound is 'ee.' In the word sketch, there is a short 'e' sound - the 'e' sounds like 'eh' (sk-eh-tch).
No. The adjective icy sounds like the letters I-C , with a long I and long E sound.
The first E has a short E sound and the second E is a schwa (unstressed, "uh") sound.
short e, as bed,
No, the words then and there do not have long e sounds. Then has a short e, and there, rhymes with air, has a short a.
No, the words then and there do not have long e sounds. Then has a short e, and there, rhymes with air, has a short a.
The E has a short E sound and the I has a short I sound.
It's long if it sounds like the letter. Both E's are short.
No, the word "Wednesday" does not have both long and short "e" sounds. It only has the short "e" sound.
Rain and cape have long A sounds; ran and cap have short A's. Bead and neat have long E sounds; bed and net have short E's. Pile and ride have long I sounds; pill and rid have short I's. Hope and wrote have long O sounds; hop and rot have short O's. Mute and pure have long U sounds; mutt and purr have short U's.
The EA pair sounds like a long E (ee) and the other E is a short E.
It has three short vowel sounds, for the A, the E, and the I.
No. There are no E's or E sounds in the preposition "in" -- it has a short I sound.
Long E = sleep seem peep short E= sled mend tend lend send then
It is a long E, because it sounds like the letter E. (rhymes with be, we).
The word "rely" has a short vowel sound for the letter 'e'.