The A in rat has a short A vowel sound, as in cat, or rap, or rag.
"Rat" has a short vowel sound. By comparison, "Rate" has a long vowel sound.
The A in rat has a short A vowel sound, as in cat, or rap, or rag.
Yes. The A is a short A sound, as in rat. (rat-uhl)
A short "a" sound similar to that used in the word "at". A long "a" sound would be correct in the word "behave".
Of the 7 words, all have the long EE sound. For the leading syllables, there are 2 that have R-shaped vowels, 3 short sound words, and 2 are long. thirteen - caret U (short U + R) fourteen - caret O (OR sound, sometimes long O) fifteen - short I sound sixteen - short I sound seventeen - short E sound, schwa sound eighteen - long A sound nineteen - long I vowel
"Rat" has a short vowel sound. By comparison, "Rate" has a long vowel sound.
The A in rat has a short A vowel sound, as in cat, or rap, or rag.
Yes. The A is a short A sound, as in rat. (rat-uhl)
Yes, "rat" is a short vowel word. It contains the short vowel sound represented by the letter "a." In phonetics, short vowel sounds are typically produced with a quick, relaxed articulation, which is evident in the pronunciation of "rat."
Yes. The A has a short A sound as in rap and rat.
A short "a" sound similar to that used in the word "at". A long "a" sound would be correct in the word "behave".
Of the 7 words, all have the long EE sound. For the leading syllables, there are 2 that have R-shaped vowels, 3 short sound words, and 2 are long. thirteen - caret U (short U + R) fourteen - caret O (OR sound, sometimes long O) fifteen - short I sound sixteen - short I sound seventeen - short E sound, schwa sound eighteen - long A sound nineteen - long I vowel
Yes, but it is more specifically an umlaut A, where the A is paired with an R as in car. This changes the sound of the short A, more specifically in British English, where it sounds like a short O (card sounds like the US cod).
I think you mean--that you are asking--if the letter "a" in the word, play, is a long, rather than short-sounding vowel. Yes, in this usage, the vowel "a" in the word play is considered "long," as opposed to the "short" usage, as in the words hat or rat, for example.
Face has a long a sound. Like rake, bake, cake, race. The short a sound is in: cat, fat, rat, sat, mat.
The A has a short A sound as in the word "rat" -- this is slightly different from the short A heard in the words crab and drab.
It sounds like the a in hat, rat, bat or flat.