Yes. The I has a short I (ih) sound as in rip and sing.
The word ring has a short I sound. It rhymes with sing and thing.
Yes, the word "ring" has a short I vowel sound, not a long I vowel sound.
No, the "i" in ring is a short vowel sound. It is pronounced like "ih" rather than a long "I" sound as in "eye."
The word 'king' has a short i sound. Some other words with that same sound are ring, bit, and pick.
The I has a short I sound in most pronunciations, to rhyme with ring and sing. There are dialects (notably Southern US) where it may be pronounced "thang" to rhyme with rang and sang. This pronunciation has been widely adopted as slang.
The word ring has a short I sound. It rhymes with sing and thing.
Yes, the word "ring" has a short I vowel sound, not a long I vowel sound.
No, the "i" in ring is a short vowel sound. It is pronounced like "ih" rather than a long "I" sound as in "eye."
The word 'king' has a short i sound. Some other words with that same sound are ring, bit, and pick.
The I has a short I sound in most pronunciations, to rhyme with ring and sing. There are dialects (notably Southern US) where it may be pronounced "thang" to rhyme with rang and sang. This pronunciation has been widely adopted as slang.
It has a short I sound.
The A has a short A sound, and the I has a short I sound.
No it doesn't, ring is a ing sound where as a moon a oooon sound.
Yes, the i in pit has a short vowel sound.
No. It has a short A sound and a short I sound (man-ij). The E has no sound.
Yes, the word "sock" has a short "o" sound, not a short "a" sound.
Yes. The A has the short A sound as in tap and back.