The word "cap" has one vowel which is short a.
The A has a short A sound as in back, cat, lap, and sat.
It has a short A sound, as in cap and bat.short
Yes. The A has a short A sound, as in cap and tap.
No. The A has a short A sound as in cat and tap. The long A is heard in cape.
The word "tack" has a short vowel sound. In this case, the 'a' in "tack" is pronounced as a short vowel sound like in the words "cat" or "cap."
The A has a short A sound as in back, cat, lap, and sat.
It has a short A sound, as in cap and bat.short
Yes. The A has a short A sound, as in cap and tap.
No. The A has a short A sound as in cat and tap. The long A is heard in cape.
The word "tack" has a short vowel sound. In this case, the 'a' in "tack" is pronounced as a short vowel sound like in the words "cat" or "cap."
Cape has a long A vowel sound. The E is silent. Compare the sound of cape, drape, grape, tape, to the sound in cap, ban, fat, or other short A words.
Yes. The A is a short A sound as in cap, and the E is part of a schwa-L sound (uhl).
The vowel preceding the E at the end of the word is the vowel before the E. Usually the vowel that has the long vowel sound (says its name).
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.
No, "eat" does not have a long vowel sound. The vowel sound in "eat" is a short vowel sound.
No, "ape" does not have a short vowel sound. The vowel sound in "ape" is a long vowel sound.
Yes, the vowel sound in "fox" is a short vowel sound.