it is an "uh" noise like the first and last "a" in the word banana -- bUHnanUH
It is the phonetic spelling for the "shwa" sound - as in "uh".
Schwa. It is the "e" sound in "the." It sounds like "uh."
It depends on how you say it but I think it is not a schwa it is an "uh" sound - represented by an upside down V. A schwa is like the vowel sound in bird
The upside down V means conjunction or AND.
I upside down is I and MOM upside down is WOW Some words which look the same whan written upside down are BOX, DID, HOOD and BOOB. Try creating other words using the key below, which lists letters and their upside down equivalents: Capital letters: B - B. C - C. D - D. E - E. H - H. I - I. M - W. O - O. W - M. X - X. lower case letters: b - p. c - c. d - q. i - i. l - l. m - w. n - u. o - o. p - b. q - d. u - n. w -m. x - x
The upside-down "e" is a symbol used in phonetics to represent a schwa sound, which is the mid-central vowel sound in English and is commonly heard in unstressed syllables. It sounds like the "uh" sound in words like "sofa" or "banana."
It means a vowel in the sound of an e. Such as o in gallop or u in circus.
It is the phonetic spelling for the "shwa" sound - as in "uh".
Schwa. It is the "e" sound in "the." It sounds like "uh."
The Alpinestars logo has what looks like an upside down e and a star.
Because the lens on the microscope are basically mirrors so they reflect therefore making e look upside down
the letter "e" gets inverted, so its upside down
"This letter: ә, is usually pronounced as "ay".: this is wrong! the symbol "e" is like "BAY" for the front vowel the upside down "e" is like "SODA" for the central vowel
instead of asking, why dont you try it
Backwards & upside down
intrestingly cool
The schwa is a mid-central vowel sound in the middle of the vowel chart. It sounds like the "uh" sound found in unstressed syllables in English words like "sofa" or "banana".