If the word has a slurred or unstressed "uh" sound, it is usually a schwa. Some typical examples of schwas for certain vowels are :
The A in adept.
The E in synthesis.
The I in decimal.
The O in harmony.
The U in medium.
The Y in syringe
The -tion suffix of many nouns is also usually considered a schwa, pronounced between -shen and -shun.
The schwa is any unstressed sound varying from "eh" to "ih" to "uh" depending on the dialect being spoken.
A common occurrence is in -tion endings that have a shenor shun sound.
Some words starting with A have an unstressed "uh" sound, such as among, awhile, and about.
(*See the related questions and links below for more on the schwa.)
Some words that start with a schwa A are
about, above, alluvial, among, around
Some E words may be considered to start with a schwa, such as evaluate.
Some U words such as undo, understand, and unnerve may or may not be considered schwas.
It is pronounced "shwa" and it's not a word, really, it represents a sound in the English language, the "uh" sound.
It is in the second syllable: -o is a schwa (unstressed uh sound).
The most common pronunciation of "memory" has a schwa sound for the O. (MEM-uh-ree)
Some pronunciations omit the O altogether as (mem-ree).
no because it isn't a word?
Possibly the last vowel sound -e- could be a schwa. But that would depend on your accent. I don't say say given like that.
The trailing syllable, -ence has the schwa sound (sy-en-s). The final E can be considered silent.
o
The A in above has an (uh) sound that is usually considered a schwa (unstressed vowel).
There is no "schwa" sound in the word mountain.
The only vowel sound in the word climb is not a schwa sound.
E
No it does not "Ag-ree" their is NO schwa sound at the end
The word reason where is the schwa sound
The A in above has an (uh) sound that is usually considered a schwa (unstressed vowel).
The schwa vowel sound makes an "uh" sound (as in "bug," "rug" or "above"). For the word "industry," the schwa sound is the u --> indUHstry.
Yes, some garages does have the schwa sound
Yes, the schwa sound is present in the word "open." It occurs in the first syllable, where the "o" makes the schwa sound.
There is no "schwa" sound in the word mountain.
Yes, the word "preview" contains the schwa sound in the second syllable. It is pronounced as /prɪˈvjuː/.
The only vowel sound in the word climb is not a schwa sound.
The schwa sound in the word "above" is the short, unstressed sound "uh" that is often represented by the symbol /ə/ in phonetic transcriptions. It is a mid-central vowel sound that is very common in English pronunciation.
yes.the word pleasure have schwa sound.
Yes, the word "alone" contains a schwa sound. In English, the schwa sound is often represented by the unstressed vowel sound in words like "alone," where it is heard as a short and obscure "uh" sound at the end of the word.
The schwa sound in "qualify" is represented by the first and last syllables, sounding like "kwuh-li-fai". It is an unstressed and often reduced vowel sound that is pronounced quickly and with a neutral mouth position.