yes
The 'a' in ant is pronounced 'ah' so it is the short vowel sound. In comparison, the 'a' in ape is the long version of the vowel, or 'ay'.
It has a short A sound as in grant, can't, can, and man.
No. The A in ant has a short vowel sound (ah as in apple).
The A has a short A vowel sound, as in can't and grant.
It is a short A sound as in ban and can't.
The a in the word ample has a short Asound.Pronounce the "a" as you would in the word ANT.
It has a short A sound as in grant, can't, can, and man.
No. The A in ant has a short vowel sound (ah as in apple).
The A has a short A vowel sound, as in can't and grant.
It is a short A sound as in ban and can't.
yes The 'a' in ant is pronounced 'ah' so it is the short vowel sound. In comparison, the 'a' in ape is the long version of the vowel, or 'ay'.
The a in the word ample has a short Asound.Pronounce the "a" as you would in the word ANT.
The short a sound, like hat, cat.
The word giant has a long I vowel sound. (jy-unt)
The "i" is the only vowel in "which", and it has a short vowel sound.
Only one. But the AU vowel pair may be pronounced as a short A (ant) or as an AW sound (umlaut A).
The word "finish" has a short vowel sound for both "i" and "a."
The 'e' in 'when' has a short vowel sound.