Yes. The A has a short A sound. In context, the E has a short I sound. (bih-gan)
The A has a short A sound as in can or man.
The A has a short A sound, as in can and man.
Yes, the E has a short I sound and the A has a short A sound. (although you see "be" in the word, it is not pronounced that way except in creative dialogue)
No, "began" does not have a long "a" sound. The "a" in "began" is pronounced as a short vowel sound, like in the word "cat."
Yes, the word "began" has a long 'a' sound, pronounced /bɪˈɡæn/.
The A has a short A sound as in can or man.
The A has a short A sound, as in can and man.
Yes, the E has a short I sound and the A has a short A sound. (although you see "be" in the word, it is not pronounced that way except in creative dialogue)
No, "began" does not have a long "a" sound. The "a" in "began" is pronounced as a short vowel sound, like in the word "cat."
It is a short A sound, as in can, man, and plan.
Yes, the word "began" has a long 'a' sound, pronounced /bɪˈɡæn/.
The E has a short I sound, and the A is a short sound as well. There is a "be" here, but (in sentences) it is not a long E vowel.
The I is short in I words such as bid, hit, sip, and wig. The Y has a short I sound in rhythm and myth. The E can have a short I sound as in began and repair. The EE has a short I sound in been.
Yes. Although we see "be" in the word, in sentence use it sounds like (big-an) with a short I sound.
The word began has two vowels sounds, which under normal pronunciation are a short I and a short A. (The beg- sounds like big, the -an sounds like Ann).Words with a short I include bid, chip, dim, pit, and win.Another word that has the short I is the plural noun women.Words with a short A include sat, that, bad, dab, gag, had, nag, and man.
It has a short I sound.
The A has a short A sound, and the I has a short I sound.