No. The AI vowel pair has a long A sound, as in pale.
They both have a long A sound (pail sounds like pale, and the AY in always).
Yes. The AI pair is pronounced as a long A sound (same as pale).
The only vowel in pal is the a. And that is a short vowel. With a long vowel it is pail.
Yes, they both have a long A vowel sound. The same sound is heard in their homophones, reign and pale.
Yes, "pail" has a short 'a' sound, pronounced as /eɪ/ in phonetics.
They both have a long A sound (pail sounds like pale, and the AY in always).
Yes. The AI pair is pronounced as a long A sound (same as pale).
The only vowel in pal is the a. And that is a short vowel. With a long vowel it is pail.
Yes, they both have a long A vowel sound. The same sound is heard in their homophones, reign and pale.
Yes, "pail" has a short 'a' sound, pronounced as /eɪ/ in phonetics.
The word "pail" has a long a sound. It is pronounced as "pay-ul".
The A in "had" has a short A vowel sound as in have, has, and bad.
The AI vowel pair has the long A sound (AY) as in pail and pale.
The word "swim" has a short vowel sound. In this case, the "i" is pronounced as /ɪ/, which is a short vowel sound. The short vowel sound is typically heard in closed syllables where the vowel is followed by a consonant.
Yes, the vowel sound of "a" in the word "can" is considered a short vowel sound. The short "a" sound in "can" is typically pronounced as /æ/.
Rash has a short vowel sound.
The word "ranch" has a short "a" vowel sound, pronounced as /ræntʃ/ with a short vowel sound.