If the word has a slurred or unstressed "uh" sound, it is usually a schwa. Some typical examples of schwas for certain vowels are :
The A in adept.
The E in synthesis.
The I in decimal.
The O in harmony.
The U in medium.
The Y in syringe
The -tion suffix of many nouns is also usually considered a schwa, pronounced between -shen and -shun.
The schwa is any unstressed sound varying from "eh" to "ih" to "uh" depending on the dialect being spoken.
A common occurrence is in -tion endings that have a shenor shun sound.
Some words starting with A have an unstressed "uh" sound, such as among, awhile, and about.
(*See the related questions and links below for more on the schwa.)
Some words that start with a schwa A are
about, above, alluvial, among, around
Some E words may be considered to start with a schwa, such as evaluate.
Some U words such as undo, understand, and unnerve may or may not be considered schwas.
It is pronounced "shwa" and it's not a word, really, it represents a sound in the English language, the "uh" sound.
It is in the second syllable: -o is a schwa (unstressed uh sound).
The most common pronunciation of "memory" has a schwa sound for the O. (MEM-uh-ree)
Some pronunciations omit the O altogether as (mem-ree).
no because it isn't a word?
Possibly the last vowel sound -e- could be a schwa. But that would depend on your accent. I don't say say given like that.
The trailing syllable, -ence has the schwa sound (sy-en-s). The final E can be considered silent.
o
The A in above has an (uh) sound that is usually considered a schwa (unstressed vowel).
There is no "schwa" sound in the word mountain.
The only vowel sound in the word climb is not a schwa sound.
E
Yes, the second syllable of "region" is unstressed and has a schwa sound.
The word reason where is the schwa sound
The A in above has an (uh) sound that is usually considered a schwa (unstressed vowel).
The schwa vowel sound makes an "uh" sound (as in "bug," "rug" or "above"). For the word "industry," the schwa sound is the u --> indUHstry.
Yes, some garages does have the schwa sound
There is no "schwa" sound in the word mountain.
The schwa is the "uh" sound...as in the word "about" - pronounced Uh-bout. So, no, the word "preview" does no contain the schwa sound.
An example of the schwa vowel sound is the sound the letter a makes in the word "about".
There is indeed a schwa sound in the word 'open'. [ˈəʊ.pən]
The only vowel sound in the word climb is not a schwa sound.
Both the A and the O in the word above are schwas. It works like this: uh-buhv Whenever a vowel that is not a U sounds like a short U, it is considered a schwa.
yes.the word pleasure have schwa sound.
schwa sound in the word canoe .