The word "hay" has a long a sound.
The word "hey" has a long vowel sound, pronounced as /heΙͺ/.
Yes, the word "hay" has a long A sound, which is pronounced as "hey".
Yes, "hatred" has a short "a" sound as in "cat" or "hat."
Almost all of the words that end in AY with an "ay" sound (bay, day, hay, say) are at the end of a syllable. It is the AI words that often do not (gain, sail, maim). Other words that have a long A sound are spelled with EY, including obey, prey, and grey. Also words from French that end in E, EE, or ET have a long A sound, such as cafe, soiree, gourmet, buffet.
In Pig Latin, holly would be expressed as "ollyhay." The first letter of the word is moved to the end and followed by a "ay" sound.
The word "hey" has a long vowel sound, pronounced as /heΙͺ/.
Either. it depends on the previous word. if the previous word had the main vowel short sound, the a would be long sound.example 1: "Have a nice day!" (have is short, asounds like ay)example 2: "Let's play a different game." (play is short, a sounds like uh)
Yes, "hatred" has a short "a" sound as in "cat" or "hat."
The word abhor has a short A sound, or "ah."You can hear the vowel A (long A sound) in bayonet (BAY-uh-neht, bay-uh-NEHT) and hatred (HAY-trehd). These are the same as the words bay and hate.
Yes, the word "hay" has a long A sound, which is pronounced as "hey".
There are three sounds in the word "hay": /h/ /e/ and //. The first sound is an aspirated voiceless glottal stop (/h/) the second is a diphthong composed of the vowels /e/ (as in "hey") and the third is a short monophthong (//) (as in "sit").
The EY in hey has a long A (ay) sound, the same pronunciation as "hay."
If it is pronounced short as 'kachi' (കച്ചി), it means, 'hay' or 'straw'. When pronounced long as 'kaachi' (കാച്ചി), it means 'killed' or 'boiled'.
Well, snake in arabic is 'haiya'. The 'h' is a heavy sound, and the 'a' is a short sound. It sounds like 'hay-ye'. Hope that helped! ^^
The pronunciation of Aiken, South Carolina is AY-kin. The "Ay" sound should sound like the "ay" sound in "hay" or "way." The "ken" sound should sound like the word "kin."
squid = Mūheʻe [mweeoo-hay-AY] The first sound can be tricky; say 'you' with an 'm' on the front.
Yes. The silent E gives the O an "oh" sound. It rhymes with hope and pope.