No. It has a short E sound, as in the words bet, get, and set.
The word with the long E sound is "peat."
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.
The word is has a short i sound, not a long e.
It has both a short E sound from the E and a long E sound from the Y.
No. It has a long i sound. Vyyyns.
No. The long 'e' sound is 'ee.' In the word sketch, there is a short 'e' sound - the 'e' sounds like 'eh' (sk-eh-tch).
Tenessee
Yes, the e sound is short in pet (noun and verb).
The word step has a short 'e' sound. A long 'e' says the letter. Steep has a long 'e' sound.
Both the e and the i have the short vowel sound.
No, the word 'you' does not have the short e sound. The ou together in this word make a long u sound. *This question asked about the word 'we' which does have a long E sound - the site software changed this 'we' to 'you' which obviously has no E in it.
Yes. The EA pair has a long E sound as in bead and beat.
Yes, "pet" has a short vowel sound. The 'e' in "pet" is pronounced with a short /ɛ/ sound.
The word "resident" has a short vowel sound. The letter "e" is pronounced with a short "e" sound like in "red" or "pet."
The word "telescope" has a long vowel sound. In this case, the letter "e" is pronounced as a long "e" sound, like in the word "see" or "bee." Short vowel sounds are typically shorter and sharper, like in the word "pet" or "cat."
Yes it does! The "e" is short and makes the "eh" sound.
No. The EE pair in sneer has an R-shaped long E sound called a caret I.
The long E says the name of the letter E (ee) as in be, me, see, and tree. The short E is an "eh" sound as in bed and get. The long E followed by an R sound is technically not a long E, but a caret I ("ear" sound). The short E followed by R may be an ur or a schwa sound.