The word "claim" has a long A sound. (klaym)
If you stretch the sound of the letter A, it can sound like "A,E" because it is phonetically two distinct vocal movements, like U (YU) and I (I, E). That is one reason they are referred to as long vowels.
It has a long A sound (ay) from the AI pair. It rhymes with aim and name.
The word 'maybe' has the long E sound in 'be.' It also has a long A sound in the first syllable.
Yes. He is pronounced "hee" as it has a long E sound. If it did not have a long E sound, it would be pronounced "heh" which is not correct.Yes, 'he' has a long 'e' sound. It is pronounced 'hee'.
Yes, the word "tree" has a long e sound, not a short e sound.
No, the word sound does not have a long e sound. It is pronounced with a short vowel sound, like "ow" in "now".
No. It has a long A sound and a silent E, to rhyme with name, fame, and claim.
It has a long A sound (ay) from the AI pair. It rhymes with aim and name.
The word came has a long A sound and a silent E, to rhyme with name, fame, and claim.
Came has a long A (ay) vowel sound, and the E is silent.It rhymes with name, fame, and claim.
Yes. The EE pair has a long E sound as in cheep and cheap. The final E is silent.
It has a long "A" sound, so long.
No, the word 'game' does not have a long E sound. 'Game' has a long A sound, but the E is silent. The silent E is a clue that the A has a long A sound.
The word 'maybe' has the long E sound in 'be.' It also has a long A sound in the first syllable.
Yes. He is pronounced "hee" as it has a long E sound. If it did not have a long E sound, it would be pronounced "heh" which is not correct.Yes, 'he' has a long 'e' sound. It is pronounced 'hee'.
In "claim" it is a long a, as in clay, bray, bay.
Yes, the word "tree" has a long e sound, not a short e sound.
No. The I has a long I sound, and the E is silent.