Head is a short ea. As in led, bed
Yes. The EA pair has a short E sound, as in bread and thread.
The EA has a short E sound in head, as in bread and tread.
Yes. The EA vowel pair has the short E sound, as in dead and bread (bred). The EA pair can also have a long E sound as in bead (beed) and plead.
The EA has a short E sound (as in head), but the Y does have a long E sound.
No. The EA in head has a short E sound, as in some other words such as bread, tread and thread.
Yes. The EA pair has a short E sound, as in bread and thread.
The EA has a short E sound in head, as in bread and tread.
Yes. The EA vowel pair has the short E sound, as in dead and bread (bred). The EA pair can also have a long E sound as in bead (beed) and plead.
The EA has a short E sound (as in head), but the Y does have a long E sound.
No. The EA in head has a short E sound, as in some other words such as bread, tread and thread.
No. The EA pair has a long E sound as in reach and teach. (Some EA words do have a short E sound, such as head.)
The EA has a short E sound. The word rhymes with weather and tether.
The word 'sneaker' does not have the short e sound. The combination EA makes the long E sound as in sneak and peek. The EA pair does not always make the long E sound. For example EA in the word 'bread' is a short E sound, and in the word 'break' it has a long A sound.
The EA has a short E sound in "meant" to rhyme with bent and sent. The EA in the present tense of the verb (mean) has a long sound, to rhyme with bean and seen.
There is no "A" sound. The EA pair has the long E vowel sound as in beat.
The EA in the word 'bead' has a long E sound. The similar word with a short E is 'bed.'
Neither. The EA pair has a long E sound as in beat and beet.