its a e that you don't her here but is in the word like Wednesday you don't here the e but its there
e is the unstressed vowel in Febuary
e
It depends on your dialect. In American English the second 'e' is unstressed and pronounced as a schwa (like the 'a' in "about"). In British English both the second 'e' and the 'a' are unstressed; in fact the 'a' practically disappears.
y
Only the first syllable of "actually" is stressed, so all the vowels in the following syllables are unstressed: the "u", the second "a", and the "y". - The second a is unstressed. An unstressed vowel is pronounced "uhh." There is a difference between an unstressed vowel and and unstressed syllable.
e is the unstressed vowel in Febuary
The unstressed vowel in "skeleton" is the first "e".
The letter "e" in "dangerous" is unstressed.
The unstressed vowel in "Listener" is the schwa sound, represented by the letter "e".
The unstressed letter in "temperature" is the second "e."
e
The unstressed vowel in "interrupt" is the second 'e' sound, represented by the letter 'e' in the word.
The second "e" in vegetable is the unstressed one. It is pronounced as a schwa sound (/ə/).
It depends on your dialect. In American English the second 'e' is unstressed and pronounced as a schwa (like the 'a' in "about"). In British English both the second 'e' and the 'a' are unstressed; in fact the 'a' practically disappears.
sphere
e
No, the word "marvelous" does not have an unstressed "e." The stress falls on the first syllable, "mar-."