The EA vowel pair is a long E sound.
EA words include beam, cream, dream, gleam, ream, seam, and steam.
Most EE words have the long E, as do E words ending in a silent E (such as extreme).
No, "speed" and "them" do not have the same vowel sound. In "speed," the vowel sound is /iː/, whereas in "them," the vowel sound is /ɛ/.
No, "hood" and "look" do not have the same vowel sound. "Hood" has the vowel sound /ʊ/ while "look" has the vowel sound /ʊ/ as in the word "book."
No, "blood" and "wood" do not have the same vowel sound. The vowel sound in "blood" is the "uh" sound, while the vowel sound in "wood" is the "oo" sound.
No, "rain" and "pail" do not have the same vowel sound. "Rain" has the long vowel sound /eɪ/, while "pail" has the diphthong vowel sound /eɪ/.
It has a short U vowel sound, sounding the same as "sum."
The word "birdie" has the same vowel sound as "dirty."
Some words that have the same vowel sound as "bin" are "pin," "sin," "gin," and "thin."
"Be," "she," "he," "see" all have the same vowel sound as "me."
No, "hill" and "nice" do not have the same vowel sound. The vowel sound in "hill" is a short i sound, while the vowel sound in "nice" is a long i sound.
The word "love" has the same vowel sound as "enough."
The word "moon" has the same vowel sound as "tune."
No, "mule" and "tool" do not have the same vowel sound. "Mule" has a long "u" vowel sound /uː/, while "tool" has a short "oo" vowel sound /ʊ/.