Yes, in the second syllable.
No, the word "marvelous" does not have an unstressed "e." The stress falls on the first syllable, "mar-."
e is the unstressed vowel in Febuary
The unstressed vowel in "envelope" is the schwa sound, represented by the symbol [ə]. It is the vowel sound found in the second syllable of the word, pronounced as "en-ve-lope".
The unstressed vowel in "Listener" is the schwa sound, represented by the letter "e".
e
e?
It depends on your dialect. In American English the second 'e' is unstressed and pronounced as a schwa (like the 'a' in "about"). In British English both the second 'e' and the 'a' are unstressed; in fact the 'a' practically disappears.
M - Marvelous and kind, U - Unconditional love, M - My guiding light.
sphere
e
The unstressed vowel in "separate" is the second "a" sound, represented by the schwa symbol /ə/.
The unstressed vowel in the sentence is often the "schwa" sound, which sounds like "uh" and is symbolized by the symbol "ə." It is the most common vowel sound in English and appears in unstressed syllables.
The unstressed vowel in "skeleton" is the first "e".