No. The EA pair is closer to a long E sound, although it is shaped by the R and is called a caret I sound. The caret I has a two-part sound due to the R (IPA iə, heard as "ear" in the US and ee-uh in the UK).
No, it is not a long E or short E. It is an R-shaped sound called a caret I. It does have the sound of a long E, but it is has another "ur" sound as well.
No, because the E says its name, not "eh" as in a short E. (The R shapes the E, so it is not technically a long E. The "ear" sound is called a caret I.)
It is the short e sound
No. The E has a long E sound, as in he, me, and we.
No, technically. The "ear" sound is a caret I sound rather than a long E. This is one of the R-shaped vowel sounds.
No, it is not a long E or short E. It is an R-shaped sound called a caret I. It does have the sound of a long E, but it is has another "ur" sound as well.
yes earn is a short ear sound if it was long it would sound like an E in the beginning
No. The EA in teach has a long E sound, and the EA in "ear" is similar, although actually an R-shaped sound called a caret I.
No, because the E says its name, not "eh" as in a short E. (The R shapes the E, so it is not technically a long E. The "ear" sound is called a caret I.)
No, none of them do. The EA pairs all have a form of long E sound, although in "ear" it is actually an R-shaped sound called a caret I.
The "long E" says the name of the letter E (be, we, demon) while the short E has an "eh" sound (bed, men. set). Either sound can be classified as neither long or short if it is followed by an R (the ear and ur sounds).
No. There is a short E at the start. And although the EE makes the sound of the letter E (normally a long E), the sound is R-controlled and is indicated by a caret I. Most caret I words have an "ear" (îr) sound.
It is the short e sound
No. The E has a long E sound, as in he, me, and we.
Yes. The E has a short E sound as in rest and bed.
No, technically. The "ear" sound is a caret I sound rather than a long E. This is one of the R-shaped vowel sounds.
No. It has a short A sound and a short I sound (man-ij). The E has no sound.