The word "piece" contains the long e sound spelled with an "i." This word refers to a portion or part of something. Other examples include "believe" and "receive," but in the context of your question, "piece" is a clear example.
Spelled correctly, and means long.
Leash does have the long e sound, as if it were spelled leesh, but goose does not. Goose has a silent e sound, as if it were spelled goos.
Yes. It has a long O (oh) and a silent E. It rhymes with cove and drove.Similarly spelled, love has a short uh sound and move has a long OO sound.
No, that would be spelled peen. Pen is pronounced pEHn so it is a short sound.
The digraph ae is almost always pronounced as a long E (e.g. algae). However, words from Scottish, such as hae (have) and brae are usually pronounced with an "ay" sound.
Spelled correctly, and means long.
No. The Y in yourself is a consonant Y (yuh sound), not a vowel.
Leash does have the long e sound, as if it were spelled leesh, but goose does not. Goose has a silent e sound, as if it were spelled goos.
There are no English words in which AA has a long A sound.
The long A is usuallly represented as ā with the sound (ay).
There are words from French spelled with an AY, such as bayou and cayenne.
dieliepietie
Yes, as do other words spelled with -IGHT (long I, silent GH). (The exceptions are -IGHT words spelled with EI, which sounds like a long A.)
The sound ur can be spelled in or
There are no IA vowel pairs with a long A sound. Almost all AI pairs have a long A (ay) sound, some exceptions being aisle, plaid, and said.
The other common EA words are break and great.
One properly spells the keywords noted "rubber bracelets". The 'e' is needed to give the 'a' in the word bracelets the long sound of 'a'. The word rubber is spelled correctly.