yes
The word "grass" has a short vowel sound for the letter "a," pronounced /æ/.
Well, honey, grass has a short vowel sound. The 'a' in grass makes the /æ/ sound, which is short and snappy. So next time you're out in the yard, remember that grass is short and sweet in more ways than one.
Grass does not have a short vowel sound. It has the "a" sound pronounced as /æ/, making it a long vowel sound.
Yes. The A has a short A sound as in grass and nabbed.
The A in grass has a short A sound, as in gas and brass. (The long A is heard in grace.)
The word "grass" has a short vowel sound for the letter "a," pronounced /æ/.
Well, honey, grass has a short vowel sound. The 'a' in grass makes the /æ/ sound, which is short and snappy. So next time you're out in the yard, remember that grass is short and sweet in more ways than one.
Grass does not have a short vowel sound. It has the "a" sound pronounced as /æ/, making it a long vowel sound.
Yes. The A has a short A sound as in grass and nabbed.
The A in grass has a short A sound, as in gas and brass. (The long A is heard in grace.)
Yes, all of the words have "short" vowel sounds :A in grass and lastE in step and bestI in wish and pinO in lost and pondU in bus and stub
The word grass usually has a short A sound in US English, rhyming with crass, gas, mass, and pass.But some dictionaries show it as an umlaut A (close to a short O) and its British pronunciation is (grahs) which is practically a rhyme for cross.
Yes. It has the short A sound as heard in grab, grant, glass, grass, gasp, and gas. This is slightly different from the short A sound heard in gratitude and graduate.
The vowel in "has" is a short vowel. It is pronounced as /æ/ which is a short 'a' sound.
Loser long or short vowel
The word "finish" has a short vowel sound for both "i" and "a."
then is a short vowel