Yes. It has the short A as in mat and cap. It is slightly different from the short A heard in mad, mass and magazine.
Yes. The A has a short A sound, as in cap and tap.
Yes, the word "map" has a short A vowel sound. The A is pronounced like "ah" in this word.
Yes. The A has a short A sound as in tack and map.
No. The EA has a long E sound, as in leap and sheaf.
Yes, the A has a short A vowel sound (hap, rhymes with map, nap and tap).
Yes. The A has a short A sound, as in cap and tap.
Yes, the word "map" has a short A vowel sound. The A is pronounced like "ah" in this word.
No, map is not a long sound. The word "map" contains the short sound /æ/.
Yes. The A has a short A sound as in map and cat.
Yes. The A has a short A sound as in tack and map.
No. The A has a short A sound as in cap and map. (the long A is in tape)
No. The EA has a long E sound, as in leap and sheaf.
Yes, the A has a short A vowel sound (hap, rhymes with map, nap and tap).
Yes, it does. The short A is the same as in ban, man, and plan.And also in words like bat, map, cab, ham and many, many more.
The A has a short A sound (as in hat and map) and the Y has a long E sound (HAH-pee).
No, pat has a "short-a" sound. The following words have a short A sound: cat, mat, slat, dad, map, flap, pal The following words have a long-a sound: late, place, lace, plane, glaze.
No, the word "jar" does not have a long vowel sound. The "a" in "jar" is pronounced with a short vowel sound, like in "cat" or "map."