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i
second i
The unstressed vowel, or schwa, is the second vowel in Saturday:Sa-tur-day
The A in above has an (uh) sound that is usually considered a schwa (unstressed vowel).
That is right; the second syllable is pronounced with a schwa.
Yes, it is. The A has a short A sound as in happy or had.
The -us in focus has the schwa sound (uhs).
The word "happen" has two short vowels, or one and a schwa.The A has a short A sound and the E is a schwa (unstressed short I).
i
i
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.
The schwa vowel is the 1st "e",because when you say it , it sounds like it has a "u" in the word cement
An example of the schwa vowel sound is the sound the letter a makes in the word "about".
second i
There are two vowel sounds that can be considered a schwa in algebra (ahl-juh-bruh), the E and the second A.
The unstressed schwa vowel in "mystery" is in the second syllable - in IPA, the word is transcribed mɪstəri.
The schwa vowel for the word "yesterday" is /ə/. It is the unstressed sound in the second syllable of the word.