That's a long "e" as in "sweet."
Schwa. It is the "e" sound in "the." It sounds like "uh."
The first E has a short E sound and the second E is a schwa (unstressed, "uh") sound.
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.
No. It has a short E sound, as in the words bet, get, and set. The word with the long E sound is "peat."
Yes. The E has a short E sound as in rebel.Yes, the word 'web' does have the short e sound. Some other words with the same sound are set, sect, and heck.
Yes, the short e sound is usually represented with a diacritic called a breve. The breve looks like a small sideways "u" and is placed above the letter e to indicate the pronunciation of a short e sound.
Yes. The I in line has a long I sound and the E is silent, as in dine, fine, and wine.
The I in line has a long I sound and the E is silent, as in dine, fine, and wine.
E line
Schwa. It is the "e" sound in "the." It sounds like "uh."
Yes. Most desktop cards in Creative's Sound Blaster "X-Fi Extreme Audio" line are PCI-E cards.
If you are in treble clef, then it is on the bottom line of the staff or the space right below the top line. If you are in bass clef, the note may be the second space from the top, as it is the only E on the staff. If you are in alto clef, it is either on the second line from the top or the space right below the last line. If you are in tenor clef, it is either on the top line or the last space, right above the last line. I hope this covers all of it.
Middle valve down
The first "e" with the line over it (the line is called a macron) is pronounced with a long "e" sound like in the word "bee." The second "e" with the curve on top of it (the curve is called a breve) is pronounced with an "eh" kind of sound; much like the "e" in the word "pet." The sixth "e" with the grave accent often denotes that an "e" would have an "eh" sound when it normally wouldn't. You can usually see this in the works of Shakespeare in which a word like "winged" would be marked to be pronounced as "wing-id" for rhyming purposes. The other "e" that has an accent on top pretty much means the same as the one before, it's just used more widely. The third and last "e"s with the dot(s) above it, the fifth and eighth "e"s with the carons on top (look like arrow tips), and the fourth "e" with the hook on the bottom aren't sounds that are used in the English language often so you wouldn't have to worry about them unless you are reading in another language.
Yes, the letter "i" in "pine" has a long vowel sound (/aɪ/).
The line over the top of a vowel is called a macron. It is used in some languages to indicate that the vowel should be pronounced as a long vowel sound.
The space notes in a treble clef are (in order from bottom to top) F, A, C, E. The line notes in a treble clef are (in order from bottom to top) E, G, B, D, F. The space notes in a bass clef are (in order from bottom to top) A, C, E, G. The line notes in a bass clef are (in order from bottom to top) G, B, D, F, A.