Yes. The AI pair is pronounced as a long A sound (same as pale).
In the word "pail," the letter "a" is followed by the letter "i" which often creates a long "a" sound in English. This is a common spelling pattern where the second vowel influences the pronunciation of the first vowel.
The only vowel in pal is the a. And that is a short vowel. With a long vowel it is pail.
No. The AI vowel pair has a long A sound, as in pale.
Yes, they both have a long A vowel sound. The same sound is heard in their homophones, reign and pale.
They both have a long A sound (pail sounds like pale, and the AY in always).
In the word "pail," the letter "a" is followed by the letter "i" which often creates a long "a" sound in English. This is a common spelling pattern where the second vowel influences the pronunciation of the first vowel.
The only vowel in pal is the a. And that is a short vowel. With a long vowel it is pail.
No. The AI vowel pair has a long A sound, as in pale.
Yes, they both have a long A vowel sound. The same sound is heard in their homophones, reign and pale.
They both have a long A sound (pail sounds like pale, and the AY in always).
The AI vowel pair has the long A sound (AY) as in pail and pale.
The word "pail" has a long a sound. It is pronounced as "pay-ul".
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.
No, there is no long vowel sound in the word "ladder".
The word globe is a long vowel. It would be a short vowel if the word globe was spelled as "glob". Otherwise, it is a long vowel.
long vowel sound.