yes
The word baby has the long vowel sound which is the letter a.
The word baby has the long vowel sound which is the letter a.
There are 2 long vowel sounds. The A has a long A sound and the Y has a long E sound (bay-bee).
If a word contains a vowel consonant and vowel the first vowel says it's name meaning the is "A" long because a vowel follows the consonant in baby. In this case the consonant being a b and the vowel a y... (y can sometimes be a vowel)
If a word contains a vowel consonant and vowel the first vowel says it's name meaning the is "A" long because a vowel follows the consonant in baby. In this case the consonant being a b and the vowel a y... (y can sometimes be a vowel)
The "A" for sure. In the first syllable, you have "BA" (rhymes with day). You know you have a long vowel because it says its name. In this case, the letter A in "baby" is a long vowel sound. (If it were a short vowel sound, it would not be pronounced like its name-- bat, for example, has a short vowel sound.) Sometimes, a letter like Y will have a vowel sound (in this case, it sounds like the E in the word "me"), but usually, a long vowel refers to the sound made by the letters A, E, I, O, and U. Here are examples of long vowels: Bake (long a); Me (long E); Time (long I); Joke (long O); and Tune (long U).
No, "can" is not a long vowel word. The "a" in "can" is pronounced with a short vowel sound.
It has a long vowel sound.
Yes. A long vowel sound is when you say the name of the vowel. The A is the pronounced (ay) as if you were saying the name of the letter. The word "baby" has a long A. It also has a long E sound created by the Y (BAY-bee).
No, there is no long vowel sound in the word "ladder".
The word globe is a long vowel. It would be a short vowel if the word globe was spelled as "glob". Otherwise, it is a long vowel.
long vowel sound.