No, the word "friend" does not have a long vowel sound. The "ie" in "friend" makes a short /e/ sound, as in "bed."
The IE pair is a long I sound, the same as the Y in trythat it replaces.
The word "pie" has a long vowel sound, as it is pronounced as "eye".
The long vowel sound in "tried" is the "ī" sound, as in "eye."
There is no IE vowel sound. The I in twice has a long I sound, and the E is silent.
The AI pair is practically always pronounced as a long A (ay) or the related R-shaped vowel ("air"). The IA is the pair that is pronounced as a long I, as in dial.
Yes. The IE pair is pronounced like the letter I. It rhymes with die and pie.
The word "believe" has the vowel sound /iː/ like the word "bee."
"So" is a vowel pair, as it contains both a vowel and a consonant. "oa" together make the long "o" sound.
No, the word "tried" does not have a long vowel sound. In phonetics, a long vowel sound is pronounced the same as the letter itself, such as the "i" in "time." In "tried," the "i" is pronounced with a short vowel sound, similar to the "i" in "sit."
In the word "fiery," the IE makes the long E vowel sound as in "see" or "be."
The plural noun babies has two long vowel sounds: the A is long and the IE pair has a long E sound (it takes the place of the Y in the singular baby).The pronunciation is (BAY-beez).