Slide has a long 'i' sound. Dam has a short 'a' sound.
Yes, the name Sam has the short A vowel sound as in sand and dam.
The word am has a short A sound, as in dam, slam, and sham.
Yes it does. It has the short a sound, to rhyme with dam, ham, and slam.
Yes. The A has a short A as in had and dam.
Yes. The A has a short A sound (ah) as in dam and lamp.
Yes, the name Sam has the short A vowel sound as in sand and dam.
The word am has a short A sound, as in dam, slam, and sham.
Yes it does. It has the short a sound, to rhyme with dam, ham, and slam.
Yes. The A has a short A as in had and dam.
No. The name Sam, or Samuel, has a short A as in dam and ram. The word "same" has a long A.
Yes. The A has a short A sound (ah) as in dam and lamp.
Yes. The first A has a short A sound while the second is pronounced as a short I (dah-mij). *The short A sounds different in damage than in dam, because the "dah" is a separate syllable.
Your assumed authority is short-lived. When your authority is eroding, you must give a dam.
The verb "am" has a short A sound, as in dam and clam.
It is a short A, as in had and dam.
Yes. The A has the short A spund as in am and dam.
The word "huge" (long U) is the word "hug" with a silent E, which usually indicates a long vowel is heard. Other examples are man-mane, bit-bite, and dam-dame.The word "huge" comes from Old French (ahuge).