Yes, the A in "tape" has a long A sound. The E is silent.
Long
The word "tape" has a long vowel sound because the 'a' is pronounced as "ay", like in the word "cake".
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)
The A in grape has a long A vowel sound, as in gray and tape. The E is silent.
The word grape has a long A and silent E, to rhyme with cape and tape.
Long
The word "tape" has a long vowel sound because the 'a' is pronounced as "ay", like in the word "cake".
Yes. The "a" in tape is long.
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)
The A in grape has a long A vowel sound, as in gray and tape. The E is silent.
The word grape has a long A and silent E, to rhyme with cape and tape.
Yes. The A has a long A sound as in cape and drape. The E is silent.
The A has a long A sound as in tape or waste. The E is silent.
No, "can" is not a long vowel word. The "a" in "can" is pronounced with a short vowel sound.
"Long vowel" refers to a vowel sound that is pronounced the same way as the letter itself. A "long vowel tail" or "e" is a phonics term that refers to the silent "e" at the end of a word like "mate" or "tape," which signals the vowel to say its long sound (e.g., a long "a" sound in "mate").
It has a long vowel sound.
No, there is no long vowel sound in the word "ladder".