oil, foil, soil, turmoil.
No he she me sky hi ...any word that does not have a consonant after the vowel leaving the vowel to make its long sound.
Make a list of words with the vowel sound(at least five words for each vowel)underline the vowel in each word
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."
Yes, the word "bet" does not have a long vowel sound. It has a short vowel sound for the letter "e."
No he she me sky hi ...any word that does not have a consonant after the vowel leaving the vowel to make its long sound.
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."
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 he she me sky hi ...any word that does not have a consonant after the vowel leaving the vowel to make its long sound.
no. they both make the long vowel sound if you can hold it then its long
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.
Almost any word you can think of that has a double consonant preceeded by a vowel will have a short vowel sound, just as almost any word with a single consonant after the vowel will make the vowel a long sound. A few words that have a short vowel sound followed by a double consonant are: batter, better, bitter, butter, hemming, teller, messier and letter.
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."