"Tap" has a short "a" sound. It is pronounced as /tæp/.
The word "tap" has a short A vowel sound.
No. The A has a short A sound as in cat and tap. The long A is heard in cape.
Yes. The A has a short A sound as in tack and map.
The A and the I are both short vowel sounds in "tapping" (verb to tap).(The long A would be the word taping, to tape)
Yes. The A has the short A sound as in tap and back.
The word "tap" has a short A vowel sound.
No. The A has a short A sound as in cap and map. (the long A is in tape)
No. The A has a short A sound, as in tax or tap.
No. The A has a short A sound as in cat and tap. The long A is heard in cape.
Yes. The A has a short A sound as in tack and map.
The A and the I are both short vowel sounds in "tapping" (verb to tap).(The long A would be the word taping, to tape)
Yes. The A has the short A sound as in tap and back.
Yes. The A has a short A sound, as in cap and tap.
No. There is no A or A sound in "top" -- the word "tap" has a short A sound.
The OR in horse has a caret O sound (long O + R). The E is silent. *In British English the OR has the AW sound rather than a long O (ore) sound.
It is a short A, as in rap or tap.
The A has a long A sound, and the I has a short I sound.