doze to dozen
No. The A has a short O sound, and the E is a schwa.
No. The O has a schwa-R sound (er/ur) in factors. The long O is also R-shaped in the word factorial, where the O is a stressed vowel.
Yes. The O is a long O, as in motion, notion, and potion. The -tion has a schwa sound (shin/shun).
The word notion has a long O and an unstressed schwa (shun, shen).
Yes. The O is a long O, as in motion, notion, and potion. The -tion has a schwa sound (shin/shun).
Yes, The first O in oppose is usually a schwa, or unstressed "uh" sound, rather than a long O or short U sound (uh-pohz).
Yes, it has the "oh" sound of a long O, and a schwa on the second syllable (OH-pin / OH-pun).
The schwa is in the first syllable of content. Con Tent. the schwa would be on the con.AnswerThere is no schwa in "content". A schwa is an elided vowel, and both "o" and "e' are pronounced clearly in this word.
There is none. The letter A is a schwa (uh) and the O is either a short U or schwa. The word rhymes with flung, sung, and tongue.
There is indeed a schwa sound in the word 'open'. [ˈəʊ.pən]
The O in accessory has a schwa sound (uh) before the long E sound of RY (ree).
The word has a long O, an unstressed (schwa) E, and a short U sound (from OU pair).