The first U has a long U (long YOO) sound, as appears from certain spellings including cute, fuel, feud, huge, human, mule, mute, few, and view. Also in some words that start with a U, such as unit, use, uniform, and Ukulele. This is a long OO with a Y-consonant sound in front, as in the word you.
The second U is normally a schwa, however, if stressed it has the same (yoo) sound.
The vowel sound in "accumulate" is the short "u" sound, like "uh." It is pronounced /ə/.
No, the vowel "u" in the word "mule" is a long vowel sound.
The u in "humor" has a long vowel sound, while the o has a short vowel sound.
Yes, the word "sun" has a vowel sound. The letter "u" in "sun" produces the short vowel sound "uh."
No, "bug" has a short vowel sound. The "u" in "bug" is pronounced as a short vowel sound, like in "cup" or "luck."
Yes, in the word "fuss," the "u" sound is considered a short vowel sound.
Yes, "confuse" has a short U vowel sound /ʌ/ as in "cup" and "love."
Yes, the word "sun" has a vowel sound. The letter "u" in "sun" produces the short vowel sound "uh."
No, "bug" has a short vowel sound. The "u" in "bug" is pronounced as a short vowel sound, like in "cup" or "luck."
Yes, "nut" contains a short vowel sound. The 'u' in "nut" is pronounced as a short vowel, making it sound like "nuht."
No, the word "buggy" does not have a short vowel sound. The "u" in "buggy" is pronounced like the /ə/ sound, which is a schwa and is typically considered a neutral vowel sound.
"Jungle" has a short vowel sound because the letter "u" is pronounced as /ʌ/ in this word.
No. The U has a long U (yoo) vowel sound, and the E is not heard.
Yes, in the word "fuss," the "u" sound is considered a short vowel sound.
The U is a long U (long OO) sound as in too. But the I has a short I sound.
The word "jungle" has a short vowel sound. The "u" in "jungle" is pronounced as a short vowel, as in "uh" sound.
No, the word "mood" does not have a short vowel sound. The "oo" in "mood" represents a long vowel sound.
Yes, it is a short vowel sound. The long vowel sound for the letter u is when it's pronounced "you;" the short vowel sound for the letter u is when it's pronounced "uh," like in this word.