In the word close there is no shwa or short e sound. Actually the word uses a silent e. A silent e is in place when there is a vowel and one consonant in between before the e.
Yes. The word "about" does have the "schwa e" sound. If you look in the dictionary the pronounciation is listed as "/??bout/". ? means the "schwa e" sound.
The schwa sound is the u or the e
The e has a short e sound. The o in most pronunciation is schwa.
The schwa sound in "fortune" is represented by the letter 'e.'
sev - e - ral The middle syllable (e) is a schwa sound.
The schwa sound is the u or the e
The schwa is the E sound in -er, which is unstressed and sounds like uhr.
E
No. The E has a schwa sound (en/in/un).
No. There is no E or E sound. The I has a short I sound and the A is a schwa-R (ur).
The schwa sound in "fortune" is represented by the /ə/ symbol. It is a neutral vowel sound and is commonly found in unstressed syllables. In "fortune," the schwa sound is heard in the second syllable, similar to the "uh" sound.
The word "side" does not have a "schwa" sound. The word side is pronounced just as it is written with a long "i" vowel sound that is created with the addition of the silent "e" at the end of the word.