Yes. The EA pair has a long E sound as in meat and bean. All uses of the word share the same pronunciation.
Yes, the word mean has a long e sound. Often when you see an e and a together it is a clue the sound may be long e. There are some words where that is not true though, like bread and head.
No. The EA pair has a long E sound as in clean and mean.
The EA pair in clean has a long E sound, as in bean and mean.
The word 'maybe' has the long E sound in 'be.' It also has a long A sound in the first syllable.
Yes. He is pronounced "hee" as it has a long E sound. If it did not have a long E sound, it would be pronounced "heh" which is not correct.Yes, 'he' has a long 'e' sound. It is pronounced 'hee'.
Yes, the word "tree" has a long e sound, not a short e sound.
The EA Pair in the word 'mean' has a long E sound. The short E word would be 'men.'
No. The EA pair has a long E sound as in clean and mean.
The EA pair has a long E vowel sound (meen).
The EA pair in clean has a long E sound, as in bean and mean.
Yes. The EE pair has a long E sound as in cheep and cheap. The final E is silent.
Yes: the long "e" sound in the word he is the same as in the pronouns she and me, and also in the words be, bee, feed, heel, mean, need, and seem.
No, the word 'game' does not have a long E sound. 'Game' has a long A sound, but the E is silent. The silent E is a clue that the A has a long A sound.
The word 'maybe' has the long E sound in 'be.' It also has a long A sound in the first syllable.
Yes. He is pronounced "hee" as it has a long E sound. If it did not have a long E sound, it would be pronounced "heh" which is not correct.Yes, 'he' has a long 'e' sound. It is pronounced 'hee'.
Yes, the word "tree" has a long e sound, not a short e sound.
No. The I has a long I sound, and the E is silent.
No, the word sound does not have a long e sound. It is pronounced with a short vowel sound, like "ow" in "now".