There is no schwa in "content" if pronounced correctly.
No, the word clever does not have a long e sound. The first e in clever is a short e, and the second e is a weak sound (or shwa). The word cleaver, in comparison, has a long e sound.
It is the phonetic spelling for the "shwa" sound - as in "uh".
'content' is the French word for satisfied, happy
The word content is a noun form:pronounced con-tent, as a word for something held or included in something (the content of the letter).pronounced con-tent, as a word for a state of satisfaction (played to their heart's content)The noun forms for the verb content (con-tent) are contentment, contentedness, and the gerund, contenting.The word 'content' is also an adjective.
content word is aword,such as noun,verb,or adjective while function is a word ,such as a preposition, a conjuction ,or an article
The shwa is in the first syllable of content. Content is brke up to con tent so con has the shwa on it.
keh-shwa
In the word close there is no shwa or short e sound. Actually the word uses a silent e. A silent e is in place when there is a vowel and one consonant in between before the e.
No, the word clever does not have a long e sound. The first e in clever is a short e, and the second e is a weak sound (or shwa). The word cleaver, in comparison, has a long e sound.
The French word "content / contente" = 'happy'the English word 'content' = "le contenu"
It is the phonetic spelling for the "shwa" sound - as in "uh".
'content' is the French word for satisfied, happy
The word content is a noun form:pronounced con-tent, as a word for something held or included in something (the content of the letter).pronounced con-tent, as a word for a state of satisfaction (played to their heart's content)The noun forms for the verb content (con-tent) are contentment, contentedness, and the gerund, contenting.The word 'content' is also an adjective.
content word is aword,such as noun,verb,or adjective while function is a word ,such as a preposition, a conjuction ,or an article
how can you use the word content in noun and verb in a sentence
The root word for contentment is "content," which comes from the Latin word "contentus," meaning satisfied or contained.
The content in this book is great.