The word "too" (as well as to and two) has a long OO (long U) vowel sound, as in cool, moon, and boot.
The word "too" has a long vowel sound.
The U is a long U (long OO) sound as in too. But the I has a short I sound.
In "to," the vowel sound is a short sound. It is pronounced like "uh."
The OO in tool has a long OO (long U) vowel sound, as in too and cool.
No, the word "tune" does not have a short vowel sound. It has a long vowel sound, pronounced as "too."
No, it is not. The way to remember is if the vowel says its name, then it's a long vowel sound. In the world "plane," the A says its name. On the other hand, the word "plan" is a short vowel sound. You can see this with other words too: pine (long vowel-- the "i" says its name), but "pin" is a short vowel sound.
The U is a long U (long OO) sound as in too. But the I has a short I sound.
In "to," the vowel sound is a short sound. It is pronounced like "uh."
The U is a long U (long OO) sound as in too. But the I has a short I sound.
The OO in tool has a long OO (long U) vowel sound, as in too and cool.
No, the word "tune" does not have a short vowel sound. It has a long vowel sound, pronounced as "too."
No. The O in "who" has a long OO (long U) vowel sound, as in to, too, and two.
No, it is not. The way to remember is if the vowel says its name, then it's a long vowel sound. In the world "plane," the A says its name. On the other hand, the word "plan" is a short vowel sound. You can see this with other words too: pine (long vowel-- the "i" says its name), but "pin" is a short vowel sound.
It has 2 long E sounds. The EA pair has a long E sound, and the Y has one, too. (ee-zee)
The vowel sound in "too" is the 'oo' sound, which is a long vowel sound.
Neither.It has a long OO (long U) sound, including to, two, and too. The vowel sound is the same as in toot and in astute.
Any single-syllable word ending in -ck has a short vowel sound. Yes, that one, too.
It has 2 long E sounds. The EA pair has a long E sound, and the Y has one, too. (ee-zee)