No. The AL is pronounced as "all" with an AW sound (caret O), which is neither short or long.
Yes, like almost every -ind word, there is a long I sound.
It has a long A. The AY pair almost always has a long A sound, as in bay, day, and way.
It has a long sound. The EE almost always has a long E sound. Peep rhymes with keep and sleep.
It has a short I sound.
The A has a short A sound, and the I has a short I sound.
Yes, like almost every -ind word, there is a long I sound.
It has a long A. The AY pair almost always has a long A sound, as in bay, day, and way.
It has a long sound. The EE almost always has a long E sound. Peep rhymes with keep and sleep.
It has a short I sound.
The A has a short A sound, and the I has a short I sound.
There is no absolute condition. However, it can have short I sound when it is between consonants and there is no silent E. Some letters may be followed by either a long or short sound (python, pygmies). The Y at the end of a word cannot have a short I sound but may have either a long I or a long E sound. The vowel pair UY also almost always has the long I sound. Examples of short I words: rhythym cyst hymn lyric system mysterious
Yes, the i in pit has a short vowel sound.
No. It has a short A sound and a short I sound (man-ij). The E has no sound.
Yes, the word "sock" has a short "o" sound, not a short "a" sound.
Yes. The A has the short A sound as in tap and back.
"and" has a short vowel sound. It is pronounced as /ænd/.
short I sound