The word 'meadow' has a short E sound in the first syllable. It also has a long O sound in the second syllable.
Some examples of other words where the EA pair have the short e sound are bread, death, and sweat. However, most words with EA together do have a long e sound. For example, the words bead and meal have a long E sound.
The word "telescope" has a long vowel sound. In this case, the letter "e" is pronounced as a long "e" sound, like in the word "see" or "bee." Short vowel sounds are typically shorter and sharper, like in the word "pet" or "cat."
The A has a long A sound, while the -ture is a schwa (chur). The E is silent.
The offspring are expected to produce both combination of long orange chromosomes from the father and short blue chromosomes from the mother. The possible combinations in the offspring could include long orange/short blue, long orange/short orange, long blue/short orange, or long blue/short blue.
It's pronounced with a short 'e' and a long 'i': preh-night.
"Sheathed" is pronounced as "sheethd," with the emphasis on the first syllable. The "ea" in the word is pronounced as a long "e" sound, like in the word "seed."
No. The pronoun he has a long E sound, as in be, me, she, and we.No, its long.
No. The E has a long E sound, as in he, me, and we.
It is the short e sound
Yes, the word "tree" has a long e sound, not a short e sound.
The E has a short E sound, as in gem. (The long E is heard in the word theme.)
The EA pair has a short E sound as in bread. (It has a long E sound in breathe.)
No, the word "he" does not have the short e sound. It is pronounced like "hee" with a long e sound.
No, the word "web" does not have a long "e" sound. It is pronounced with a short "e" sound like in "bed."
The word "when" has a short e sound.
The E has a short E sound and the I has a short I sound.
It has both a short E sound from the E and a long E sound from the Y.
The word 'beneath' has a long E sound from the EA pair, as in neat and breathe. The first syllable is 'be' but in speaking, it has a short I sound (bih-neeth). There is no short E sound.