Head is a short ea. As in led, bed
"Head" is considered a long "ea" word because the "ea" makes the long vowel sound of "ee" in this word.
No, "head" is not a short "e" word. It has a long "e" sound.
The word "head" has a short e sound. It is pronounced as "hed."
No, "head" does not contain a short vowel sound. The "ea" in "head" makes the long vowel sound /iΛ/.
The EA has a short E sound (as in head), but the Y does have a long E sound.
No, the word "head" has a short e sound, not a long e sound.
No, "head" is not a short "e" word. It has a long "e" sound.
The word "head" has a short e sound. It is pronounced as "hed."
No, "head" does not contain a short vowel sound. The "ea" in "head" makes the long vowel sound /iΛ/.
The EA has a short E sound (as in head), but the Y does have a long E sound.
No, the word "head" has a short e sound, not a long e sound.
Yes, the word "peach" has a short e sound, like in the word "red".
The 'EA' in leather has a short vowel sound, pronounced as "eh."
The word 'sneaker' does not have the short e sound. The combination EA makes the long E sound as in sneak and peek. The EA pair does not always make the long E sound. For example EA in the word 'bread' is a short E sound, and in the word 'break' it has a long A sound.
The word "ea" in "meant" is pronounced as a long vowel sound.
There is no "A" sound. The EA pair has the long E vowel sound as in beat.
The word 'meadow' has a short E sound in the first syllable. It also has a long O sound in the second syllable. Some examples of other words where the EA pair have the short e sound are bread, death, and sweat. However, most words with EA together do have a long e sound. For example, the words bead and meal have a long E sound.
The EA in the word 'bead' has a long E sound. The similar word with a short E is 'bed.'