Neither. Although the letter E can be heard (normally a long E), and the final E is silent, the sound is R-controlled and is indicated by a caret I. Most caret I words have an "ear" (îr) sound, as in the homophone "hear."
No, the word "here" does not have a long "e" sound. The vowel sound in "here" is a short "e" sound, pronounced as "heer."
Yes. The first E in "here" has a long E vowel sound, as in hear. The final E is silent.
It has a long E and a silent E at the end. It is pronounced the same as hear.
No. The pronoun he has a long E sound, as in be, me, she, and we.No, its long.
No. The E has a long E sound, as in he, me, and we.
No, the word "here" does not have a long "e" sound. The vowel sound in "here" is a short "e" sound, pronounced as "heer."
Yes. The first E in "here" has a long E vowel sound, as in hear. The final E is silent.
It has a long E and a silent E at the end. It is pronounced the same as hear.
The E has a short I sound, and the A is a short sound as well. There is a "be" here, but (in sentences) it is not a long E vowel.
No. The EA pair has the long E sound here, as in team and reach.
No. The pronoun he has a long E sound, as in be, me, she, and we.No, its long.
No. The E has a long E sound, as in he, me, and we.
It is the short e sound
Yes, the word "tree" has a long e sound, not a short e sound.
No. The EA has an R-shaped long E sound (caret I) as in deer and here.
The E has a short E sound, as in gem. (The long E is heard in the word theme.)
The EA pair has a short E sound as in bread. (It has a long E sound in breathe.)