It is a long vowel, words like know and snow are,
words like cow and plow are not however :)
No, "know" does not have a long vowel sound. The "o" in "know" is a silent vowel, so it does not affect the pronunciation of the word.
No, "KNOW" does not contain a long vowel. It has a silent "K" at the beginning followed by a short vowel "o" sound.
That all depends on which vowel you're talking about. The O is long, but the E is short.
No, "tyrant" does not have a long vowel. The "a" in "tyrant" is pronounced as a short vowel sound.
Rayon has a long vowel sound.
Long
No, "KNOW" does not contain a long vowel. It has a silent "K" at the beginning followed by a short vowel "o" sound.
It has the long O vowel sound, as in know, slow, and blow.
That all depends on which vowel you're talking about. The O is long, but the E is short.
The letter "e" in the word "bean" is considered a short vowel sound because it says its short sound /e/ as in "bed."
Monosyllabic words and their derivatives have a short vowel. A vowel followed by a single consonant and an 'e' is long. A vowel followed by a single consonant and a different vowel is likely to be long. A vowel followed by two consonants is short. There are exceptions, of course, and you just have to learn them I'm afraid.
It has one long vowel (E) and one schwa sound.
The word "ruby" has a long vowel sound for the letter "u" which is pronounced "oo" like in "blue" or "true".
Loser long or short vowel
It has a long vowel sound.
It has a long vowel sound.
The long vowel sound in the word "title" is the "i" sound, pronounced like "IE" in words such as "pie" or "lie."
is aim a long vowel or short vowel