Yes. It is a word that has the EA pronounced as a long A (as in grate), as well as the words steak and break (stake, brake).
The other words are -ear words pronounced as "air" (caret A).
Yes. The EA pair is pronounced as a long A (ay) sound.
No. The EA has a long E sound. The only common word that has a long A is great.
No. The EA pair has a long A sound, as in great.
The long A is usuallly represented as ā with the sound (ay).
The other common EA words are break and great.
Yes. The EA pair is pronounced as a long A (ay) sound.
No. The EA in great has a long a sound (grate). The EA in learned has a short E sound.
No. The EA has a long E sound. The only common word that has a long A is great.
no there is a long island sound and their is the great south bay
No. The EA pair has a long A sound, as in great.
The long A is usuallly represented as ā with the sound (ay).
The other common EA words are break and great.
Break has a long A sound. The EA vowel pair also has the long A in the word "great."Break is a homophone of brake.
The Long Island Sound is mentioned on page 24 of "The Great Gatsby" by F. Scott Fitzgerald. In this passage, Nick describes the view from Tom and Daisy Buchanan's house, including the "green Sound."
Exactly the same sound is seen in the homophone grate, and in the rhyming words crate, slate, and plate. It is the long A (ay) sound. The long A sound and silent E are also seen in words such as blade, crave, plane, and trade, and the long A is also in AI words such as drain, frail, and waist.
sound great
It has a long "u" sound.