Bed, red, bet, debt, set, met, pet, vet, get, jet, let, peg, leg, beg,
The vowel sound in "tent" is a short e.
The a is short, the e is long
No.
The term "vowel consonant e" (VCE) is a pronunciation tool in learning how to speak English. Generally, when an e follows a vowel-consonant pair (the word "male", for example), the e is silent and the vowel has a "long" sound rather than "short" (the word "mall" has a short a ). This is also known as the "magic e" or "helper e", as it gets the preceding vowel to "say it's name".
The U has a long U (long YOO) vowel sound. The E is silent.
It is a short e. Other words with a short e:bellcelldellhellmellowLong e words include:heelmealrealsealteal
The E in went has a short E vowel sound, as in bent, sent, spent, and tent. The short E appears in many E words such as beg, sent, ever, bread, kept, and revenue.
The E has a short E sound, as in gem and then.
"Sent" has a short E vowel sound. It is pronounced like "eh" in this word.
The e is a short vowel, while the o is more of a long vowel.
It is a long E sound as in the words least and feast.
The E and I both have short vowel sounds.
The e is a short vowel, while the o is more of a long vowel.
Yes it does. It has a short E sound as in belt. Rhyming words include fell, sell, and tell.
In the English language, the concept of short and long vowels typically applies to the pronunciation of individual vowel sounds within words, not to the words themselves. The word "smell" contains a short vowel sound, specifically the short "e" sound represented by the letter "e." This can be determined by considering the pronunciation of the word and its phonetic transcription, rather than categorizing the word "smell" as having a short or long vowel.
No. The E is a short E as in then. Words with W and WH can have unusual vowel sounds.
Vest has a short e vowel sound.