One,in the second syllable. The EA pair is a long E sound.
Yes. The first syllable has an unstressed (schwa) sound. The A sounds like "uh."
This would depend on your accent or what variety of English you speak. However I think there is no schwa in stomach. A schwa sounds like the 'er' in herd or nerd
Yes it is. The schwa for the word "cardinal" is "a".
The word has two short A sounds, and the O has an unstressed (schwa) sound.
A schwa is the sound of an unstressed syllable in a word or unstressed word in a sentence and is the most common sound in the English language. A typical example is the word doctor where the second syllable is reduced to a schwa and a non-English speaker couldn't know if the word was doctar, docter, doctor or doctur as it sounds like doct'r.
The initial a is a schwa. The ai is the letter a sound.
There are two : a long E and a schwa.
No. Only the first A has a schwa sound (unstressed uh). The AI vowel pair has the AY sound. (uh-FRAYED)
The word "probably" has two schwa sounds. The first one is in the second syllable, represented by the letter 'o', and the second one is in the fourth syllable, represented by the letter 'a'.
The schwa vowel sounds like "uh" and is commonly heard in unstressed syllables. In the word "mystery," the schwa vowel is found in the second syllable, which sounds like "myst-uh-ree."
Yes. The first syllable has an unstressed (schwa) sound. The A sounds like "uh."
The schwa vowel is the 1st "e",because when you say it , it sounds like it has a "u" in the word cement
There are 2. The I has a schwa sound (juh), and the A is a short A (raff).The E is silent.
The schwa vowel is the 1st "e",because when you say it , it sounds like it has a "u" in the word cement
Yes, the "er" in "lower" is typically pronounced with a schwa sound, which sounds like "uh".
Schwa is a very short neutral vowel sound.The word Schwa is Hebrew.It is a reduced vowel in many unstressed syllables.Especially if syllabic consonants are not used.
There is no schwa in ego. Both vowel sounds of the word are pronounced clearly, as in ee-go, while a schwa occurs with an unstressed vowel sound.