Yes, "pie" is a long vowel word because the letter "i" in "pie" makes the long /ai/ sound as in "eye".
The word "pie" contains a long vowel sound. In this case, the vowel sound for "i" is pronounced like the letter "I" in the alphabet.
The IE pair has a long I sound, as in die and fried.
Yes. The IE has a long i sound (aye) in pie, as in die and lie. The Greek letter pi is pronounced the same way (PY).
No, the word "tiger" does not contain a short vowel. The "i" in "tiger" is a long vowel, pronounced as "ie" in the word "pie."
The long vowel sound in the word "title" is the "i" sound, pronounced like "IE" in words such as "pie" or "lie."
The word "pie" contains a long vowel sound. In this case, the vowel sound for "i" is pronounced like the letter "I" in the alphabet.
The IE pair has a long I sound, as in die and fried.
Yes. The IE has a long i sound (aye) in pie, as in die and lie. The Greek letter pi is pronounced the same way (PY).
No, the word "tiger" does not contain a short vowel. The "i" in "tiger" is a long vowel, pronounced as "ie" in the word "pie."
The long vowel sound in the word "title" is the "i" sound, pronounced like "IE" in words such as "pie" or "lie."
The word pipe has a long I vowel sound. (The E is silent.) You can tell if a vowel is long or short because long vowels sound like the actual letter.
The IE vowel pair has a long I sound in pie, as in lie and vie. The homophone (pi) also has a long I. In the Spanish word meaning foot, the two vowels are pronounced separately (pee-ay).
Yes. The IE pair is pronounced like the letter I. It rhymes with die and pie.
Yes, "i" is considered a long vowel when pronounced like in words such as "pie" or "fine."
Yes. Although the OR is closer to a schwa, the I is definitely a long I sound. (hur-eye-zun)
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.