It is a long E, as in eve. (The name Evan has the short E sound.)
The first vowel sound in "even" is typically considered a short vowel sound.
It has a long vowel sound
The first E is long, but the second is unstressed (schwa).
The first E in even has a long E sound. The second is a schwa sound (en/un/in).
long vowel because the o you can even hear it the long o sound in moment that's my awser
Yes, "trial" has a short vowel sound. The "i" in trial is pronounced as a short /ɪ/ sound, as in "sit" or "pig".
It has a long vowel sound
The first E is long, but the second is unstressed (schwa).
The first E in even has a long E sound. The second is a schwa sound (en/un/in).
The first E has a long E vowel sound, the second is a schwa.
The first E has a long E vowel sound, the second is a schwa (un).
No. The first E is a long E and the second is an unstressed or schwa sound (en/un).
It has a long E sound and a schwa or unstressed vowel (eh/un).
long vowel because the o you can even hear it the long o sound in moment that's my awser
Yes, "trial" has a short vowel sound. The "i" in trial is pronounced as a short /ɪ/ sound, as in "sit" or "pig".
It has a long E and a schwa or unstressed N sound.
It has a long E sound and a schwa or unstressed vowel (eh/un).
The word has two short E sounds and a short I (REZ-ih-dent). (* in some pronunciations, the second E is a schwa sound, or even silent)