Yes. The EY has a long A sound (oh-bay).
No, the word "obey" does not have a long a sound. The vowel sound in "obey" is pronounced like the "eh" in "bed."
No, the word "they" does not have a long a vowel sound. It is pronounced with a short e sound, similar to "th-eh."
When "y" comes at the end of a word, it can make the long "e" sound like in "happy" or the long "i" sound like in "sky."
No, the word "survey" does not have a long A sound. It is pronounced as "sur-vay."
'They' has a long vowel sound, pronounced as "th-ey".
Some words spelled with 'ey' that have a long A sound are: convey, obey, survey, and they.
No, the word "they" does not have a long a vowel sound. It is pronounced with a short e sound, similar to "th-eh."
Yes. The EY has a long A sound (ay) as in grey and obey.
When "y" comes at the end of a word, it can make the long "e" sound like in "happy" or the long "i" sound like in "sky."
No. The EY in they has a long A sound (thay) to rhyme with hey, prey, and obey.
'They' has a long vowel sound, pronounced as "th-ey".
No. The EY pair has a long A sound (as in obey or whey). The contraction form 're (are) has a schwa-R sound (er/ur).
Vines has a long "i" sound, not a short "i" sound.
Yes, the word "fact" has a short 'a' sound, not a long 'a' sound.
No, the word "ladder" does not have a long vowel sound. The vowel sound in "ladder" is short.
The word "was" has a short-a sound, like "ahhh". If you wanted a long-a sound, the word "ways" has a long-a sound, where the letter "a" sounds like "aie"
It has a long OO sound, which is related to a long U.
The word is has a short i sound, not a long e.