It' a long sound - like 'wheel', instead of a short sound like .bed'.
It is a long E sound as in the words least and feast.
The vowel sound is a long e, as in "Eek!"
The first E in "decent" has a long vowel sound. The second E has an unstressed (eh) or schwa sound.
No, the word "here" does not have a long vowel sound. It is pronounced with a short e sound.
No, the word "met" does not have a long vowel sound. The vowel sound in "met" is short.
"Credit" has a short vowel sound because the "e" is pronounced as "eh" rather than "ee."
Yes, be has a long e vowel sound.
Vowel sounds can be short or long depending on the pronunciation. In general, a vowel followed by a consonant in a single-syllable word is short (such as "cat"), while a vowel followed by a silent E or two consonants is long (such as "cake").
No, the word "buggy" does not have a short vowel sound. The "u" in "buggy" is pronounced like the /ə/ sound, which is a schwa and is typically considered a neutral vowel sound.
The I has a long E vowel sound and the E has a schwa sound (lee-tur).
The first E in "decent" has a long vowel sound. The second E has an unstressed (eh) or schwa sound.
It has a long O vowel sound and a long E vowel sound (from the Y).
It has one short vowel sound and one long vowel sound, both E. The first E has a short E sound, and the Y has a long E sound (chehr-ee).
It depends on the individual word. The word "teacher" has a long vowel sound in the middle, with a long 'e' sound. However, the word "teach" has a short vowel sound, with a short 'e' sound.
The vowel is a long A sound, created by the silent E. The word rhymes with date and late.
The word "pencil" has a short e vowel sound, like the e in "pet" or "bed."
The e is a short vowel, while the o is more of a long vowel.