Yes. The A has a short A sound as in fat and pact.
The word ''fact'' has a short vowel sound.
No. The word fact has a short A sound, as in fat and tact. With a long A sound, it would be "faked."
Yes, the word "fact" has a short vowel sound. The vowel "a" in "fact" is pronounced as a short /æ/ sound, as in words like "cat" or "hat".
Yes, the short A in wax is identical to the short A in apple and fact.
No. The A in act has a short A sound, as in fact or hacked.
The word ''fact'' has a short vowel sound.
No. The word fact has a short A sound, as in fat and tact. With a long A sound, it would be "faked."
Yes, the word "fact" has a short vowel sound. The vowel "a" in "fact" is pronounced as a short /æ/ sound, as in words like "cat" or "hat".
The A has a short A sound as in fat or tact.The a in the word fact is a short a
Yes, the short A in wax is identical to the short A in apple and fact.
No. The A in act has a short A sound, as in fact or hacked.
The word "fool", in fact, is neither a short o sound nor a long o sound, but a long U sound. I do not know the reason why for this pronunciation distortion, but you can probably relate it to the fact that many English words have unusual forms (e.g. plural of child is "children" instead of "childs"). Think of the "oo" sound in fool comparing to the "u" sound in lute. If you think about it, they sound the same. On the other hand, the o sound in "clock" is a short o sound and the o sound in "moat" is a long o sound.
It has a short I sound.
The A has a short A sound, and the I has a short I sound.
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.