Some examples of words with the schwa sound and "n" include button, mountain, lantern, and certain.
The schwa sound in "dozen" is an unstressed and reduced vowel sound that is commonly represented by the symbol ə. In American English, it sounds like "duzz-n" with the schwa sound occurring in the first syllable.
No, the short U sound is different from a schwa sound. The short U sound is a vowel sound found in words like "cup" and "sun," and it is pronounced by making a tight, rounded "uh" sound. The schwa sound, on the other hand, is a neutral vowel sound found in unstressed syllables, such as the "uh" sound in "about" or "banana."
"Under" has a short vowel sound for the "u" as in "uh" followed by the schwa sound "n-duh".
The AI words include again and against. Some other words may be pronounced as short E in some dialects: certain curtain mountain fountain chaplain bargain These word endings that are spelled with ai-n sound more like short i as in "in". And that is only because of the "schwa."
The O is easy, it's a schwa sound. The A sound is a short A, but the N following the A is palletalized (softened). The A starts out as a short A sound, but then the tongue moves in preparation for the N and makes it sound as if a consonant-Y sound follows the A. It sounds different than the short A in "antler" for example. This is common among words with an "ang" or "ank" sound. See the web page at the related link below.
No, the short U sound is different from a schwa sound. The short U sound is a vowel sound found in words like "cup" and "sun," and it is pronounced by making a tight, rounded "uh" sound. The schwa sound, on the other hand, is a neutral vowel sound found in unstressed syllables, such as the "uh" sound in "about" or "banana."
It has a long E and a schwa or unstressed N sound.
The AI words include again and against. Some other words may be pronounced as short E in some dialects: certain curtain mountain fountain chaplain bargain These word endings that are spelled with ai-n sound more like short i as in "in". And that is only because of the "schwa."
The O is easy, it's a schwa sound. The A sound is a short A, but the N following the A is palletalized (softened). The A starts out as a short A sound, but then the tongue moves in preparation for the N and makes it sound as if a consonant-Y sound follows the A. It sounds different than the short A in "antler" for example. This is common among words with an "ang" or "ank" sound. See the web page at the related link below.
Some examples are laugh, cough, rough.
Yes, the first letter "e" in the word "lemon" is pronounced with a short vowel sound, as in "le-muh-n."
Some words that have O followed by N, V, TH, and more rarely M, R, or Z will have the "uh" sound.N : honey, money, monk, sponge, son, ton, wonV : above, coven, covet, governor, love, oven, shoveTH : brother, mother, nothing, onion, otherM : stomachR : worryZ : dozen(Words like domestic have an unstressed uh sound called a schwa.)
Some words that start with N and end with N are:nationneonneuronnewbornnoonnotationnotionnounnunnylon
No. One ends with an "m" sound and one ends with an "n" sound. Rhyming words need to end with the same sound.
Some words that end with the letter N are:apronballoonclowndrainelevenfawngreenheaveninnjavelinkitchenlemonmoonnationoceanpatternqueenraccoonscreentownunionvisionwomanxenonyearnzeppelin
Some double N words are:announceannoyannexanniversaryantennaannualbandannabannerbanningbeginningbonnetbunnycanneryconnectcannibalcanningcannoncannulacayennechannelconnoteconnoisseurcunningdinnerdisconnectevennessfanningfennelflannelfunnelfunnygrannygrinninghennainninnateinnerinningjuliennekennelmannersmanningmannishmayonnaisenannyninnynunneryopennesspanningpennantpennypinnaclepinningplanningquestionnairereconnectroadrunnerrunningrunnyscanningskinnysonnetspinningstunningsunnytanningtennistunneltyrannyuncannyunnerveunnoticedwinningwinnowzinnia
No and never are meaningful words. They start with the letter n.