No. The A is pronounced either as a short A (ant) or AW sound (awnt).
Only one. But the AU vowel pair may be pronounced as a short A (ant) or as an AW sound (umlaut A).
It has a long "u" sound.
Cake has a long "a" sound.
Some words with "au" and a short "a" sound are: laugh, sausage, laundry, fraud.
Aunt is a homophone. Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings, like aunt (your parent's sister) and ant (the insect). Homographs are words that are spelled the same but have different meanings, like tear (tear in your eye) and tear (rip).
Only one. But the AU vowel pair may be pronounced as a short A (ant) or as an AW sound (umlaut A).
It has a long "u" sound.
Cake has a long "a" sound.
Some words with "au" and a short "a" sound are: laugh, sausage, laundry, fraud.
Aunt is a homophone. Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings, like aunt (your parent's sister) and ant (the insect). Homographs are words that are spelled the same but have different meanings, like tear (tear in your eye) and tear (rip).
The long "y" sound is the same as the long "i" sound. The words "my" and "rhyme" have this sound.
The word "vines" has no A or A sound in it. The word "vanes" has a long A sound.
The A has a long A sound. The I has a short I sound.
Is bugle short you sound or long you sound
No, the word "flute" does not have a long u sound. It is pronounced with a long "u" sound followed by a "t" sound.
It can have any of several sounds: - short A (ant to rhyme with slant) - umlaut A (as in Arthur) - short O (ont to rhyme with font) - AW (awnt to rhyme with haunt)
The word "pail" has a long a sound. It is pronounced as "pay-ul".