Vowels you see are e, a, and e. Vowels you hear are e and e.
You hear one vowel. The e sound. Orthographically speaking(the written word) there are two vowels. A and e.
Adjacent vowels are where two vowels are together and give their unique sound. For example, in the word "create," you hear the E and A sound so they are adjacent. In the word "rain" you only hear the A sound, so they are not adjacent. ChaCha!
There are five vowels in the word "resourceful" - 'o', 'u', 'e', 'o', 'u'.
The word "basket" contains the vowels "a" and "e".
You can't hear the 'e'.You'll be surprised to know that there is another vowel in the word that you don't really hear: the first 'a'. Yes, there is a vowel sound, but it is the schwa sound, the sound that most unstressed vowels make. Schwa is heard with many unstressed vowels, whatever the vowel, and they sound virtually identical to each other.
There are 3 vowels.
how many vowels in the word rabbit
No, look at the vowels in the word. You have "i.e." The rule is when two vowels go walking the first does the talking. So you hear the long "I"
There are 3 vowels in early
3 vowels
3 vowels e-i-i