The vowel sound in gone is aw, and the voiced consonant ending the syllable makes it long, not short. But remember, "long" and "short" are inaccurate descriptions of English vowels, and only exactly apply to some of them.
It has a short vowel sound
The word "am" has a short A vowel sound, as in apple.
The word "tap" has a short A vowel sound.
Yes, the vowel sound of "a" in the word "can" is considered a short vowel sound. The short "a" sound in "can" is typically pronounced as /æ/.
The word has a short A sound and a short I sound.
It has a short vowel sound
The word "tap" has a short A vowel sound.
The word "am" has a short A vowel sound, as in apple.
Yes, the vowel sound of "a" in the word "can" is considered a short vowel sound. The short "a" sound in "can" is typically pronounced as /æ/.
The word has a short A sound and a short I sound.
The 'e' in 'when' has a short vowel sound.
"Said" has a short vowel sound.
That is a short vowel.
Yes, the word "bed" has a short vowel sound.
The A in "had" has a short A vowel sound as in have, has, and bad.
The word "swim" has a short vowel sound. In this case, the "i" is pronounced as /ɪ/, which is a short vowel sound. The short vowel sound is typically heard in closed syllables where the vowel is followed by a consonant.
A,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Makes the short vowel sound