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.
That is right; the second syllable is pronounced with a schwa.
In the word "animal," the schwa syllable is the second syllable, which is the "i" sound. The schwa is a mid-central vowel sound that is unstressed and often occurs in unstressed syllables in English words. In this case, the schwa sound is represented by the letter "i" in the second syllable of "animal."
No it does not "Ag-ree" their is NO schwa sound at the end
Yes, the second syllable of "region" is unstressed and has a schwa sound.
This depends on your pronunciation. For me there is no schwa in composition. But some people might pronounce the 'o' in the second syllable - po - as a schwa. The words herd or bird have a schwa in them. (for my pronunciation).
In simple terms a schwa is an unstressed or toneless vowel, such as the "e" in open.
It is in the last syllable, -a is a schwa.
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.
It is in the second syllable: -a is a schwa.
That is right; the second syllable is pronounced with a schwa.
Only one in the last syllable, unless you have some kind of a southwest accent.
The schwa is the upside-down 'e' in phonics, and is used for vowels that makes sounds that are not their long and short sounds. I believe the schwa in 'syllable' is the 'a.' (Sil-AH-bohl).
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.
In the word "animal," the schwa syllable is the second syllable, which is the "i" sound. The schwa is a mid-central vowel sound that is unstressed and often occurs in unstressed syllables in English words. In this case, the schwa sound is represented by the letter "i" in the second syllable of "animal."
Yes. In the word 'given', the schwa occurs on the 'en' syllable.
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.