Yes. The A has a long A sound, and the E is silent.
Yes. The A has a long A sound, and the E is silent.
The word "cane" has a long vowel sound, represented by the letter 'a'. In the word 'cane', the 'a' says its own name (long 'a' sound) instead of the short 'a' sound.
It has a short A, as in ban and man. The long A (ay) sound is heard in cane.
Yes. The A is pronounced like that letter's name (ay), as in cane and sane. The E is silent.
It has a long A sound and a silent E, to rhyme with lane and wane.
Yes. The A has a long A sound, and the E is silent.
The word "cane" has a long vowel sound, represented by the letter 'a'. In the word 'cane', the 'a' says its own name (long 'a' sound) instead of the short 'a' sound.
It has a short A, as in ban and man. The long A (ay) sound is heard in cane.
No. The A has a long sound as in cane and same. The E is silent.
Yes. The A has a long A sound and the E is silent. It rhymes with cane and pain.
Yes. The A is pronounced like that letter's name (ay), as in cane and sane. The E is silent.
It has a long A sound and a silent E, to rhyme with lane and wane.
Yes. The A has a long A sound, and the E is silent.
In the word "chain," the vowel sound is considered a long vowel. The letter "a" in "chain" is pronounced as /eɪ/, which is the long vowel sound for the letter "a." This is because it says its name, rather than a short sound like in "cat" or "mat."
Many times, adding an E (silent E) to the end of a word with vowel-consonant will create a long vowel word. Examples: sat - sate can - cane man - mane din - dine fin- fine dun - dune
No, "can" is not a long vowel word. The "a" in "can" is pronounced with a short vowel sound.
It has a long vowel sound.