The long vowel in the word "snow" is the letter 'o'.
The word "display" has a short I sound and a long A sound. (depending on dialect, either syllable may be accented)
It has a long OO sound, which may be considered a long U.
A silent "e" at the end of a word can indicate a long vowel sound in the preceding vowel (e.g., "name"). However, a single vowel at the end of a word may not necessarily result in a long vowel sound (e.g., "love").
Yes, the word "mayor" has a long vowel sound for the letter "a." It is pronounced as "may-er."
The long vowel in the word "snow" is the letter 'o'.
The word "display" has a short I sound and a long A sound. (depending on dialect, either syllable may be accented)
It has a long OO sound, which may be considered a long U.
A silent "e" at the end of a word can indicate a long vowel sound in the preceding vowel (e.g., "name"). However, a single vowel at the end of a word may not necessarily result in a long vowel sound (e.g., "love").
Yes, the word "mayor" has a long vowel sound for the letter "a." It is pronounced as "may-er."
It depends on the specific word or context. Some words may have a long vowel sound, such as "cute," where the "u" makes the long /uː/ sound. Other words may have a short vowel sound, such as "cat," where the "a" makes the short /æ/ sound.
No, the word "mane" has a long vowel sound with the "a" being pronounced like "may-n" in English.
Both a long E and a long A may be used to extend the sound of a long E.
It is a short vowel because if it were a long vowel it would sound like the A in May but in this case it should sound like the A in Cat or else it would be a totally different word
The word "fuel" has the short vowel sound, pronounced like "f-yoo-l".
As an article (a, an, the), the word "a" usually has a schwa/ short U sound (uh), unless speaking specifically about the letter A (e.g. grade A milk).Also, it may stressed for rhetorical purpose as a long A.
No, "alligator" is not a short vowel word. It contains a long vowel sound, spelled with two vowel letters "a" and "i."