No. The EA has a long E sound as in leave and lean.
The word "leaf" has a long e sound (/liːf/).
The EA pair has a long E sound as in reef.
No. The EA has a long E sound, as in leap and sheaf.
The EA pair in leaf has the long E vowel sound, as in lean and grief.
Neither. The EA pair has the sound of a long E, as in lean and reef.
The word "leaf" has a long e sound (/liːf/).
The EA pair has a long E sound as in reef.
No. The EA has a long E sound, as in leap and sheaf.
No. The EA has a long E sound, as in leap and sheaf.
The EA pair in leaf has the long E vowel sound, as in lean and grief.
No. When has a short e sound. Leaf has a long e sound though. When a letter says it's own name then it is long.
Neither. The EA pair has the sound of a long E, as in lean and reef.
It is the short e sound
No. The E has a long E sound, as in he, me, and we.
Yes. The E has a short E sound as in rest and bed.
No. It has a short A sound and a short I sound (man-ij). The E has no sound.
No, the word "jet" does not have a short e sound. It is pronounced with a short e sound, as in "eh."