Only one. The first U has a short U sound, the second U and the A have similar sounds, but unstressed and therefore schwas (eh/uh).
There are two short vowel sounds in the word "copy": the short o sound in the first syllable and the short y sound in the second syllable.
There are two vowel sounds in the word "running": the short "u" sound in the first syllable and the short "i" sound in the second syllable.
There are two short vowels in the word "cactus," the 'a' and the 'u'.
There are 2. The I has a schwa sound (juh), and the A is a short A (raff).The E is silent.
Long vowel sounds occur when a vowel is pronounced like its name. For example, in the word "cake," the 'a' makes a long 'a' sound. Long vowel sounds are often stretched out and held longer than short vowel sounds.
Both the A and I have short sounds (ah-rid).
There are two short vowel sounds in the word "copy": the short o sound in the first syllable and the short y sound in the second syllable.
There are 3 : a short U and 2 schwa sounds.
There are two vowel sounds in the word "running": the short "u" sound in the first syllable and the short "i" sound in the second syllable.
There are 4 vowel sounds : long U (OO), schwa for the first E, short or umlaut A, and short I for the last E.
There are two short vowels in the word "cactus," the 'a' and the 'u'.
There are 2. The I has a schwa sound (juh), and the A is a short A (raff).The E is silent.
There are 2, a schwa for the A and a short U. (uh-mung)
Long vowel sounds occur when a vowel is pronounced like its name. For example, in the word "cake," the 'a' makes a long 'a' sound. Long vowel sounds are often stretched out and held longer than short vowel sounds.
The word "aunt" has one vowel sound. It is the "aw" sound as in the word "caught."
No. Many -ar words have R-shaped short A sounds (arr) that are different from a short A because they include a pseudo-vowel sound from the R. (see related link)
Two:Presume (short e, long u)The second E is silent.