Yes, the AI has the long A sound in "wait" and the word "weight" is pronounced the same way.
Yes, the word "wait" has a long "a" sound, pronounced as /weɪt/.
"Wait" has a long vowel sound because the vowel "a" says its name.
Yes, the word "freight" has a long "a" sound as in "fate" or "wait."
Yes, "wait" contains a short e sound, pronounced /weɪt/.
The name "Wade" has a long a sound, similar to the word "wait."
No, the word "straight" does not have a long A sound. The A in "straight" is pronounced as a short vowel sound, like the A in "cat."
No, "wait" and "late" do not rhyme. "Wait" has a long "a" sound (like "way"), while "late" has a long "a" sound (like "eight").
Yes, "wait" contains a short e sound, pronounced /weɪt/.
No, the word "straight" does not have a long A sound. The A in "straight" is pronounced as a short vowel sound, like the A in "cat."
Yes. The AI vowel pair has the long A (ay) sound, as in wait and laid.
The word 'weigh' has a long 'a' sound. It is pronounced exactly the same as the word 'way'.
The "e" in the word "eight" has a long vowel sound.
The EIGH in "weight" and "weigh" is a long A vowel sound (sound like wait and way).
No. It has a long A and silent E, rhyming with late, fate, and wait.
Yes, "trait" is a short vowel word. The sound of the vowel "a" in "trait" is a short vowel sound, pronounced like "ah."
Neither. The EIGH in weight has a long A sound, as in weigh, neigh, and eight. The homophone is 'wait."
The EI pair has a long A (ay) sound, so that eight is pronounced the same as ate. The EI have this same sound in the words weigh (way) and weight (wait).
Neither. The EIGH has a long A sound, as in eight (ate), weight (wait), weigh (way) and sleigh (slay)