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).
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.
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.
The O in accessory has a schwa sound (uh) before the long E sound of RY (ree).
There is indeed a schwa sound in the word 'open'. [ˈəʊ.pən]
The I in pilot has a long I sound, as in the word pile. The O has a schwa sound.