No. The AY has the long A sound.
No, "stay" does not have a long vowel sound. The "a" in stay is pronounced as a short vowel sound, like in the word "cat."
The word "stale" has a long a sound, pronounced like "stay-ul."
It has a short I sound.
The A has a short A sound, and the I has a short I sound.
The word stale has a long A (ay) sound and a silent E, as in the words scale and swale. Other words that begin with the same sound are stable, stay and stain.
No, "stay" does not have a long vowel sound. The "a" in stay is pronounced as a short vowel sound, like in the word "cat."
The word "stale" has a long a sound, pronounced like "stay-ul."
It has a short I sound.
The A has a short A sound, and the I has a short I sound.
The word stale has a long A (ay) sound and a silent E, as in the words scale and swale. Other words that begin with the same sound are stable, stay and stain.
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 A has the short A sound as in tap and back.
Yes, the word "sock" has a short "o" sound, not a short "a" sound.
"and" has a short vowel sound. It is pronounced as /ænd/.
The A has a short A (ah) sound as in cat and sat.
short I sound