In the last syllable.
In the word "emotion," the schwa syllable falls on the first syllable: e-MOH-shun. The schwa sound is represented by the "uh" sound in this word.
In the word "syllable," the schwa vowel sound is represented by the "uh" sound in the unstressed first syllable, sounding like "suh-luh-bul."
Yes, "serenity" is a schwa word because the unstressed second syllable is pronounced as a schwa sound /ə/.
Yes, the word "rustic" does have the schwa sound. It is pronounced as /ˈrʌstɪk/, with the schwa sound occurring in the first syllable.
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 vowel in "cactus" is typically represented by the letter "u" in the second syllable. It is an unstressed, neutral sound that is commonly heard in English pronunciation.
It is in the last syllable, -a is a schwa.
It is in the second syllable: -a is a schwa.
That is right; the second syllable is pronounced with a schwa.
In the word "syllable," the schwa vowel sound is represented by the "uh" sound in the unstressed first syllable, sounding like "suh-luh-bul."
In the majority pronunciation, the second syllable has a schwa. However, there are some pronunciations where the first and second syllable have the same vowel sound (like "u" in bus), and these pronunciation does not have a schwa.
Yes. In the word 'given', the schwa occurs on the 'en' syllable.
No. The syllable -ive is usually considered a short I, not a schwa.
Yes. In the word 'given', the schwa occurs on the 'en' syllable.
Yes, but the actual schwa depends on the pronunciation used: 1) MAH-muh (as in momma) has the schwa as the second syllable (unstressed). 2) muh-MAH (informal, affected) has the schwa as the first syllable (unstressed).
Second syllable.
sev - e - ral The middle syllable (e) is a schwa sound.
The -mal syllable's A is pronounced as a schwa or unstressed sound (nor-mul).