Yes. Lots of words start with a schwa that sound like umbrella, e.g. about, another, abut, astound.
The word umbrella has three syllables. (um-brel-la)
That is right; the second syllable is pronounced with a schwa.
No it does not "Ag-ree" their is NO schwa sound at the end
Yes, the second syllable of "region" is unstressed and has a schwa sound.
This depends on your pronunciation. For me there is no schwa in composition. But some people might pronounce the 'o' in the second syllable - po - as a schwa. The words herd or bird have a schwa in them. (for my pronunciation).
Yes. The first syllable has an unstressed (schwa) sound. The A sounds like "uh."
"Umbrella" has a short vowel sound on the first syllable ("um"), and a schwa sound on the second syllable ("brella").
It is in the last syllable, -a is a schwa.
In the word "emotion," the schwa syllable falls on the first syllable: e-MOH-shun. The schwa sound is represented by the "uh" sound in this word.
It is in the second syllable: -a is a schwa.
That is right; the second syllable is pronounced with a schwa.
In the word "syllable," the schwa vowel sound is represented by the "uh" sound in the unstressed first syllable, sounding like "suh-luh-bul."
In the majority pronunciation, the second syllable has a schwa. However, there are some pronunciations where the first and second syllable have the same vowel sound (like "u" in bus), and these pronunciation does not have a schwa.
Yes. In the word 'given', the schwa occurs on the 'en' syllable.
No. The syllable -ive is usually considered a short I, not a schwa.
Yes. In the word 'given', the schwa occurs on the 'en' syllable.
Yes, but the actual schwa depends on the pronunciation used: 1) MAH-muh (as in momma) has the schwa as the second syllable (unstressed). 2) muh-MAH (informal, affected) has the schwa as the first syllable (unstressed).
Second syllable.