Yes. The U has a short U despite the silent E (juj).
The first vowel sound in "judgment" is "u" as in "judge," and the second vowel sound is "e" as in "judge" without pronunciation.
The U has a short U (uh) sound, and the E is silent (as in budge, fudge, and grudge).
The short vowel in the word "opposite" is the letter "o".
The first I is a short I, the second I is a long I. (The C is silent.)
Yes, "silent" has a short vowel sound in the first syllable ("si-").
The first vowel sound in "judgment" is "u" as in "judge," and the second vowel sound is "e" as in "judge" without pronunciation.
The first I is a short I, the second I is a long I. (The C is silent.)
It has a short I sound for the first I, and a long I for the second. The E is silent.
The short vowel in the word "opposite" is the letter "o".
The first E has a short E sound. The second is a long E and the third E is silent.
The first e is the short e; it has the 'eh' sound. The second e is silent, but makes the a into a long a.
The first I is a schwa, the second I is a long I, and the E is silent.
Yes. The second I is a long I. The first I is a short I and the E is silent.
The U has a short U (uh) sound, and the E is silent (as in budge, fudge, and grudge).
Yes. The first O and the I have short vowel sounds. The second O is a schwa and the E is silent.
The first E and the I both have short vowel sounds. The second E is a schwa and the final E is silent.
The second I is a schwa sound. The first E is pronounced as a short I and the final E is silent.