Pretty much the same as British and Australian English, but say the "R" more.
That is the american pronouciation dummy.
Short "a" as in the English word fast.
schedule
Mine assumption isˌsædʒɪˈtipəʊtnt in English andˌsædʒɪˈtipoʊtnt in American.
American English speakers commonly pronounce it to rhyme with burn, learn, and turn.
The O in orange is R-shaped, and can have the AW sound (equivalent to OR in British English). This gives it the sound (AW-rinj) or (OR-inj) Some speakers do pronounce it with a short O (aahr-inj).
The proper way to pronounce Stephen is Stefan. In American English the way to pronounce Stephen is with a V as in Steven.
(uh lye zuh) coming from a full english speaking american
In the United states, it is Zee Elsewhere, it is Zed
The answer is yes and no - this depends on the accent of the speaker. In general, an English speaker would pronounce "what" as /wɒt/, hence without any "a" sound (ɒ is short "o" sound). An American speaker would pronounce it either as /wɑː t/ or /wʌt/, hence only the last variant has the short "a" sound (ʌ). This is a dictionary pronunciation and may vary from speaker to speaker.
Flag is translated into "flagga" and is pronounced similarly to the English pronunciation with a short first "a", a hard "g" and then another short "a".
The short form "ad" (advertisement) and "add" (to sum) are the same, a short A sound that rhymes with bad, had, mad, and sad.