Some words that have a long sound spelled with ee are:
agree
bee beech beep beet bleed breed
cheep creed creep
decree deed degree
emcee
fee feeble feed feel flee foresee free freed
glee greed green greet
heed heel
indeed
jamboree
keel keep
lee leek
meek meet
need
peek peel peer preen
queen queer
reed reel
screech see seep seethe sheep sheer sheet sleek sleep sleet speech steep sweep sweet
teen teeter teeth tepee tree tweet
veneer
wee weed weep
Some words with a long E sound spelled "ee" include: bee, see, tree, and need.
The words are from French where E can sound like A. In French they have the acute accent (é). They include puree, soiree, and fiancee (the feminine version of fiance), and the English past tense forms sauteed and pureed.
Yes, the word "happy" has a short "a" sound, not a long "I" sound. "Happy" is pronounced as "hap-ee."
Most words spelled with -ear have a long E sound called a caret I, which sounds like "ear" as in fear, gear, and hear. It is also heard in words such as beer and pier. A few have the long A sound called a caret A, which sounds like "air" as in fare and fair. These are bear, pear, swear, wear, and tear (rip).
Almost all of the words that end in AY with an "ay" sound (bay, day, hay, say) are at the end of a syllable. It is the AI words that often do not (gain, sail, maim). Other words that have a long A sound are spelled with EY, including obey, prey, and grey. Also words from French that end in E, EE, or ET have a long A sound, such as cafe, soiree, gourmet, buffet.
Puree is pronounced with a long e sound, like "pyu-ray."
The sound in "been" is a short i sound (bin). This is practically a unique sound for the EE pair, although in French words they can have a long A sound (puree, soiree, toupee).
The words are from French where E can sound like A. In French they have the acute accent (é). They include puree, soiree, and fiancee (the feminine version of fiance), and the English past tense forms sauteed and pureed.
The EA sounds like EE in many words, including easy and please.
There are none where the EA has an "ah" sound. But there are words spelled with EA that have separate sounds for the two (ee-ah): beatitude is one. There are also words that have a short A other than the EA, such as anteater.
Yes, the word "happy" has a short "a" sound, not a long "I" sound. "Happy" is pronounced as "hap-ee."
The EE in beet is a long E, as in the homophone "beat." The EE is almost always a long E, a notable exception being the word "been" (bin), and words from French that end in a long A sound for EE.
Almost all of the words that end in AY with an "ay" sound (bay, day, hay, say) are at the end of a syllable. It is the AI words that often do not (gain, sail, maim). Other words that have a long A sound are spelled with EY, including obey, prey, and grey. Also words from French that end in E, EE, or ET have a long A sound, such as cafe, soiree, gourmet, buffet.
Most words spelled with -ear have a long E sound called a caret I, which sounds like "ear" as in fear, gear, and hear. It is also heard in words such as beer and pier. A few have the long A sound called a caret A, which sounds like "air" as in fare and fair. These are bear, pear, swear, wear, and tear (rip).
Puree is pronounced with a long e sound, like "pyu-ray."
Yes. The EE pair has a long E sound as in feel and need. The EE practically always has a long E sound.
Words with the long E sound are spelled with E, AE, EA, EE, EI, IE, or an ending Y:agreebeatcarry (y often has the long e sound)deep , departeelfeelingsgeesehealivy (y = long e)jeep, jeanskeep, keyleave, lethal, litermeat , mediateneedleonlypeacequeen, queasyreason, retreatsea, see, seasonteen, teeth, teamunique ( i = long e)veal , venialwe, wheat, wheel,yeast, yieldzeal, zebrastoryhistory
The word "tree" has a long vowel sound, as the "ee" makes the long /iΛ/ sound.