No, the word "here" does not have a long "e" sound. The vowel sound in "here" is a short "e" sound, pronounced as "heer."
It is a long E, because it sounds like the letter E. (rhymes with be, we).
It has neither. The final E is silent. The first E is R-controlled in that it makes two sounds when combined with the R. This is the caret I or "ear" sound. So "here" sounds the same as "hear."
Yes. The first E in "here" has a long E vowel sound, as in hear. The final E is silent.
Long E. The EY pair in key sounds like "ee" not "eh."
Gasoline has a short A sound, a schwa for the O, and a long E sound which is produced by the I (the E is silent). The third syllable sounds like "lean."
Yes. The word "here" has a long E and a silent E, and sounds like hear.
Yes, the word 'here' does have the long e sound. You can make this sound with the single e with a consonant and a silent e like it does in the word 'here' but you can also make the same sound with the letters e and a together. An example would be the word 'hear' which you can see sounds like here but looks different and means something entirely different too.
No. There are no E's or E sounds in the preposition "in" -- it has a short I sound.
Yes. The pronouns he, she, me, and we all have long E sounds.
It is a long E, because it sounds like the letter E. (rhymes with be, we).
It has neither. The final E is silent. The first E is R-controlled in that it makes two sounds when combined with the R. This is the caret I or "ear" sound. So "here" sounds the same as "hear."
No, the words then and there do not have long e sounds. Then has a short e, and there, rhymes with air, has a short a.
Yes. The first E in "here" has a long E vowel sound, as in hear. The final E is silent.
Yes long sounds like the letter. Meet=long "e".
There are no E or A sounds of any kind in the word "strips."
Three e - e - y. The y is a vowel here sounds like 'e'
Long E. The EY pair in key sounds like "ee" not "eh."