vegetable , minature , february , definite , environment , describe , raspberry , consonant and parliament
In the phrase "It's a boy!" the indefinite article "a" is unstressed: its vowel is reduced to a schwa pronounced uh. And the verb "is" is so unstressed it has lost its vowel entirely.
a, of, in, at, the, an, out, to... smaller words
organize
FATTENING
An unstressed vowel is a vowel in the word you don't sound.
No such thing as a stressed vowel. If someone told you that, you might have heard it incorrectly.
An unstressed vowel is a vowel in the word you don't sound.
There are no unstressed, or schwa vowels in the American pronunciation of "necessary." In British pronunciation, the vowel of the third syllable is unstressed to the vanishing point: necess'ry
Only the first syllable of "actually" is stressed, so all the vowels in the following syllables are unstressed: the "u", the second "a", and the "y". - The second a is unstressed. An unstressed vowel is pronounced "uhh." There is a difference between an unstressed vowel and and unstressed syllable.
In the word "excellent," the schwa vowels are the second and third "e" sounds. These schwa vowels are pronounced as a neutral, unstressed "uh" sound, similar to the "a" in "about" or the "e" in "the."
There are actually two unstressed vowels in the word "similar". The first vowel, "i" is the only stressed vowel. The other two reduce to schwa in speech.
The A has the schwa (unstressed sound) which is actually a schwa-R (ehr/uhr).
Some words that have vowels in them are ;;Are In Some TimeRubber Pencil
Schwa is often used in weak syllables, such as unstressed vowels in English words. It can be found in words like "a" or "the" where it has a reduced or neutral pronunciation. Schwa is also commonly used in the pronunciation of certain suffixes, such as "-er" or "-or."
sphere
Words without vowels are unpronounceable.