Not technically. The EA pair produces a long E, but it is shaped by the R. This is called a caret I sound and includes all the words that have the "ear" double sound, including the homophone "here."
hear is long vowel... long /a/ as in gate long /e/ as in need long /i/ as in nice long /o/ as in yoke long /u/ as in you
Neither. The A is not sounded. The EA pair has the sound of a long E, as in beer, near, or clear.
The word 'bone' does not have a long or a short e sound in it. It does have an e at the end, but that e is silent so you don't hear that sound at all.
Yes. The first E in "here" has a long E vowel sound, as in hear. The final E is silent.
The word "hear" has a long vowel sound for the letter 'e', pronounced like "here."
"Hear" doesn't have an "a" sound at all; it has a long "e" sound.
hear is long vowel... long /a/ as in gate long /e/ as in need long /i/ as in nice long /o/ as in yoke long /u/ as in you
Neither. The A is not sounded. The EA pair has the sound of a long E, as in beer, near, or clear.
Yes. The EA vowel pair has a long E sound, as in hear and rear.
No. The EA has a long E sound, as in clear and rear.
The word 'bone' does not have a long or a short e sound in it. It does have an e at the end, but that e is silent so you don't hear that sound at all.
Yes. The first E in "here" has a long E vowel sound, as in hear. The final E is silent.
It has a caret I sound, which is indistinguishable from a long E in US English.
Hear has a type of long E called a caret I (eer) because it makes the same sound as the letters (ir).
No, the EA in year has a form of long E sound called a caret I, as in hear and clear.
No. It is a long O (and a silent E). You can hear the (oh) sound.
Yes, the vowel pair EA is a long E sound in hear, ear, fear, year and so forth.