Some are:
limes
pie
rice
rye
tripe
You can freeze many foods. Some foods can be salted. Canning or putting it into jars can keep many foods fresh. You can also pickle or brine some foods. Some foods keep well if you just seal them into plastic.
No.
A long vowel is one where you hear the name of the letter: A (ay), E (ee), I (eye), O (oh), or U (you). Some long U sounds are long OO sounds, as in dune and flute.
Some examples of words with a long i vowel sound are: kite, time, like, and lime.
They use foods that must last for a long time since they can't just walk into a supermarket and buy food. some examples are dried fruits & nuts and canned foods.
Despite the silent E, the O in some has a short U sound, sounding the same as "sum."
so that they will stay fresh for as long as you want.
Some are different experiments so theres no right answer.
Some examples of critical vowel sounds with the long "i" sound include words like "cry," "flight," "pie," and "sight." These words feature the "i" sound pronounced as a long vowel with the "i" sound.
Many people get 'short term' rhinitis from some foods, but it sounds as though you have an allergy to apple concentrate.
A "long" vowel sound is mainly when you hear the "name" of the letter in a word. A short vowel sound is an exhaled sound, such as "ah" or "eh" or "uh." Some sounds are neither long or short but a combination sound. Examples: fat (short A) - sounds like faht (f-ah-t) fate (long A) - sounds like fayt (f-A-t) A words that end in Y are typically all "long A sounds" : bay, day, way
There are two long A sounds, from the AY and EA (day-brayk).