Yes. The first e in "scene" is a long vocal.
The words be, he, me, she, and we have a long E sound. Longer words could include becalm, detract, menial, prepaid, and retain, or words with a long E and silent E such as gene, scene, mete, concrete, and complete.
No, the word clever does not have a long e sound. The first e in clever is a short e, and the second e is a weak sound (or shwa). The word cleaver, in comparison, has a long e sound.
The word is has a short i sound, not a long e.
No. It has a short E sound, as in the words bet, get, and set. The word with the long E sound is "peat."
It has both a short E sound from the E and a long E sound from the Y.
No, the word "cent" does not have a short e sound. It is pronounced with a short e sound, similar to "sent."
A short "e" sound is typically pronounced briefly, like in the word "pet." A long "e" sound is pronounced for a longer duration, like in the word "keep."
No, the word sound does not have a long e sound. It is pronounced with a short vowel sound, like "ow" in "now".
Yes. The EE pair has a long E sound as in cheep and cheap. The final E is silent.
No, the word 'game' does not have a long E sound. 'Game' has a long A sound, but the E is silent. The silent E is a clue that the A has a long A sound.
Words that have a single E followed by a silent E have the long E sound : cede, gene, mete, scene, compete, and complete. Many long E words have a "vowel pair" with or without a silent E at the end : trees, cheese, seas, tease, breeze, and keys.
The words be, he, me, she, and we have a long E sound. Longer words could include becalm, detract, menial, prepaid, and retain, or words with a long E and silent E such as gene, scene, mete, concrete, and complete.
Yes. He is pronounced "hee" as it has a long E sound. If it did not have a long E sound, it would be pronounced "heh" which is not correct.Yes, 'he' has a long 'e' sound. It is pronounced 'hee'.
No. The I has a long I sound, and the E is silent.
The long e sound is represented by the letter "e" in words like "beet", "seat", and "see". It is pronounced with the mouth in a slightly open and relaxed position, producing a clear, elongated "eee" sound.
No. The E has a long E sound, as in he, me, and we.
The word 'maybe' has the long E sound in 'be.' It also has a long A sound in the first syllable.