Yes it does. The long A is created by the silent E. Gate rhymes with fate and hate.
The a in the word gate has a long sound.
Yes, "gate" is a long vowel word because the vowel sound 'a' in 'gate' is pronounced with a long sound, as in the word 'late'.
The word gate has a long A sound and a silent E, as in fate, hate, and mate.
The word "pant" has a short A sound as in pan and slant.
The a in the word fade is a long a.
hear is long vowel... long /a/ as in gate long /e/ as in need long /i/ as in nice long /o/ as in yoke long /u/ as in you
In the English language, the word "chase" contains a long vowel sound. The "a" in "chase" is pronounced as a long vowel sound, as in the word "cake" or "gate." This is because the letter "a" is followed by a silent "e" at the end of the word, which typically indicates a long vowel sound.
It is pronounced with the "j" sound, as opposed the the "g" sound it the word "gate".
No. The A has a long A sound as in gale and rate. The E is silent.
The A in space has the long A sound - the same as the letter A sound in play not the 'a' sound in cat. The proper pronunciation, using the international phonetic alphabet, is /speɪs/ where the eɪ represents the sound in question.
Yes, "Investigate" is an open syllable word because the last syllable has a long vowel sound (gate) and ends in a vowel.
Nope, it's a long vowel sound.Otherwise it would be gat (which would rhyme with cat). The 'e' on the end makes the 'a' a long sound!