Yes. The EE is almost always a long E sound as in see, tree, and beet.
One EE word that does not have the long E is been(short I sound).
The word "bee" has a long E sound.
No. It has a long E sound, as in me and we.
Yes, the word "feet" has a long e sound, like the letter "e" in "bee" or "see."
It has a long E sound, like be.
The word "bee" has a long vowel sound. The letter "e" at the end of the word signals the long vowel sound in English, making the "ee" in "bee" sound like the letter name "e" instead of a short "eh" sound.
The word "bee" has a long E sound.
No. It has a long E sound, as in me and we.
Yes. The word be has a long E sound, as in the homophone word "bee." Other two-letter long E words are be, he, me, and we.
Yes, the word "feet" has a long e sound, like the letter "e" in "bee" or "see."
It has a long E sound, like be.
The word "bee" has a long vowel sound. The letter "e" at the end of the word signals the long vowel sound in English, making the "ee" in "bee" sound like the letter name "e" instead of a short "eh" sound.
Yes, the word "bee" has a short e sound, pronounced like /iː/ in IPA.
Yes. The pronouns he and she both have a long E sound.Yes. The E is a long E, to rhyme with bee and see.
No, the only vowel sound is a long I. (lykz)
Yes, the EE pair has the long E sound as in bee and knee.yes
No, the word "smell" has a short e sound, not the long e sound. The long e sound is usually heard in words like "bee" or "see."
No. Although the letter has a phonetic spelling (eye), it is not any kind of E sound.Examples of long E words include: he, be, bee, tee, we, see, fee, and so on.