Yes. The EY has a long A sound (oh-bay).
Yes. The EY in "they" sounds like a long A, as is also seen in trey, whey, and obey.
By itself, an ending Y will have a long E sound (baby, silly) or long I sound (by, try). The pair EY can have a long A sound, as in obey, prey, they, trey, whey, and convey.
Yes. Many EY words are sounded as a long A, including survey, prey, obey, and whey.
The EY pair in they has a long A vowel sound, as in whey, obey, and convey.
Is the word wanted a long a sound or short a sound
Yes. The EY in "they" sounds like a long A, as is also seen in trey, whey, and obey.
Yes. The EY has a long A sound (ay) as in grey and obey.
By itself, an ending Y will have a long E sound (baby, silly) or long I sound (by, try). The pair EY can have a long A sound, as in obey, prey, they, trey, whey, and convey.
No. The EY in they has a long A sound (thay) to rhyme with hey, prey, and obey.
Yes. Many EY words are sounded as a long A, including survey, prey, obey, and whey.
The EY pair in they has a long A vowel sound, as in whey, obey, and convey.
No. The EY pair has a long A sound (as in obey or whey). The contraction form 're (are) has a schwa-R sound (er/ur).
Is the word wanted a long a sound or short a sound
They include: grey, hey, obey, prey, they, trey, whey convey, disobey, purvey, survey
The word "say" has a long vowel sound--specifically, the long "a" sound.
The word "rainbow" has a long 'a' sound.
The word "vines" has no A or A sound in it. The word "vanes" has a long A sound.