The article "an" is used before words that begin with vowel sounds to maintain smooth pronunciation. This is to avoid the harsh sound that would occur if a word beginning with a vowel sound were to follow "a."
The word "put" has a short vowel sound.
No, "put" does not have a long vowel sound. It is pronounced with a short vowel sound.
The vowel 'a' in "tyrant" has a short vowel sound.
I believe it is long. I may be wrong. Please put thumbs down if wrong.
The first syllable "note" in the word notebook has the short vowel sound.
No, "put" does not have a long vowel sound. It is pronounced with a short vowel sound.
You put a an in front of it, as it starts with a vowel.
if the word after it begins in a vowel
can you put a breve on that short vowel when it comes to cvc or consonant vowel consonant.
"an" always put "an" before a word starting with a vowel.
foot
The word "put" has a short vowel sound.
It has neither. It has a short OO vowel sound, as in good, foot, or put.
The first syllable "note" in the word notebook has the short vowel sound.
it is a slang language with a B put in front of every vowel
The indefinite article is "an," a form of "one." Its n is dropped before a consonant sound, but preserved before a vowel sound.
you should put 'an' before electric because the first letter of the next word is a vowel