The short O sound is seen in O words such as
body, bomb, bond, robot
cot, con, cop, cot, clot, chop
dot, follow, gob, god, agog, got
hop, hot, job, jot, knock, knot, lob, lot,
mob, not, pod, plod, pop, pot, plot, sob, tot, top, and stop.
Some A words also have the short O sound : what, wad, wan, want
Short vowel sound. Words such as ice and item are long I vowel sounds.
Is panel a short or long vowel sound
Yes, the word "fact" has a short vowel sound. The vowel "a" in "fact" is pronounced as a short /æ/ sound, as in words like "cat" or "hat".
Yes, the 'a' in "have" has a short vowel sound, pronounced as /æ/.
The vowel sound in "dried" is /aɪ/. It is a diphthong sound formed by a combination of the 'ai' letters, and it is commonly found in words like "dried," "light," and "fly."
It has a short vowel sound, like "bat," "hat," and "cat." A long vowel sound can be found in words like "bake," "cake," and "make."
The word "class" has a short vowel sound. The letter "a" in this word is pronounced as /æ/.
It has a long vowel sound, like "bake," "make," or "take." A short vowel sound can be found in words like "hat," "bat," or "cat."
No. Some words spelled with -all have an AW/OR vowel sound (caret O), and rhyme with awl. Ball is a homophone of "bawl." * note that some words, such as ballast and ballet, do have a short A vowel sound.
The words "mother" and "brother" have an "uh" sound that is typically sounded as a short U (compare to mutter).The words "mother" and "brother" have a short vowel sound. A long vowel sound carries the vowel as in "o" in loose or the "e" in femur. Short vowel sounds do not carry the sound of the vowel, as the "o" in foot or the "o" in dog. A good way of showing the difference is to take one word with a short vowel sound such as "bit" and listen to how the I sounds, then make a long vowel sound (eye rather than /ih/ ) and you'd pronounce the word as b-eye-t, which is bite.
It depends on the specific word or context. Some words may have a long vowel sound, such as "cute," where the "u" makes the long /uː/ sound. Other words may have a short vowel sound, such as "cat," where the "a" makes the short /æ/ sound.
It has a long vowel sound, like "bake," "make," or "take." A short vowel sound can be found in words like "hat," "bat," or "cat."