No. It usually has a short A sound as in pass and last.
The British English pronunciation sounds more like a short O, as in gloss.
Glass is a noun, not a vowel.
Long vowels sound like the letters of the vowels in the alphabet. Glass has a short a sound, if it had a long vowel sound it would sound like glacier. Hear the difference between the short vowel sound of glass and the long vowel sound of Glacier?Short vowel sounds are shorter than long vowel sounds. The sound is more sharp and cut off. "A" is a shorter sound than an "ay" sound.
Glass is a noun, not a vowel.
The word "panel" has two syllables and two vowel sounds: the first is a short "a" sound, and the second is a schwa.
Rayon has a long vowel sound.
Glass is a noun, not a vowel.
Long vowels sound like the letters of the vowels in the alphabet. Glass has a short a sound, if it had a long vowel sound it would sound like glacier. Hear the difference between the short vowel sound of glass and the long vowel sound of Glacier?Short vowel sounds are shorter than long vowel sounds. The sound is more sharp and cut off. "A" is a shorter sound than an "ay" sound.
Glass is a noun, not a vowel.
The word "panel" has two syllables and two vowel sounds: the first is a short "a" sound, and the second is a schwa.
Only the words ending in E have the long vowel sound for A. This is called the "long vowel silent E" rule. For an amusing school-age exercise, see the related link.
It has one long vowel (E) and one schwa sound.
Rayon has a long vowel sound.
It has a long vowel sound.
Long
No, "can" does not have a long vowel sound. The vowel 'a' in "can" is pronounced with a short vowel sound.
It has a long vowel sound.
"Shake" has a long vowel sound. The "a" in "shake" is pronounced as "ay," making it a long vowel.