Say it out loud and listen to yourself for the SCHWAsound in it.
The schwa sound is the inderterminate unstressed vowel in the word the.
(Except when the is followed by a word starting with a vowel.)
I also had to learn about schwa so this is the answer- Schwa ends with an a so that's why, but direction is a schwa word too.
sh-wa
A schwa is like the 'er' in herd but it depends a bit on your accent.
The vowel sound in the word ill - transcribed in IPA as /ɪ/, is a near-close near-front unrounded vowel - not a schwa.
pillow
Yes, the second syllable of "region" is unstressed and has a schwa sound.
Yes, some garages does have the schwa sound
The word reason where is the schwa sound
e
No, the word "scratch" does not have a schwa sound. The "a" in "scratch" makes a short /æ/ sound.
there is no schwa sound in brilliant
The schwa sound in "about" is in the second syllable, represented by the unstressed "schwa" written as "/ə/". So, it sounds like /ə-bout/.
The schwa sound is the u or the e
There is no "schwa" sound in the word mountain.
Yes, some garages does have the schwa sound
The schwa vowel sound is the most common vowel sound in English, represented by the symbol ə. It is a short and neutral sound, similar to the 'uh' sound in words like "sofa" or "banana."
The A has the schwa (unstressed sound) which is actually a schwa-R (ehr/uhr).