It has a short 'a' sound.
It has a short A vowel sound and a schwa sound (wag-un).
The A has a short A sound (as in wag, drag, nag) and the O has a schwa sound (wag-un).
No. The A has short A sound, and the E is a schwa. (wag-un)
It has a short A vowel sound and a schwa sound (wag-un).
Yes. The A in flag has a short A sound, as in bag, wag, and lag.
It has a short A vowel sound and a schwa sound (wag-un).
The A has a short A sound (as in wag, drag, nag) and the O has a schwa sound (wag-un).
It has a short A vowel sound and a schwa sound (wag-un).
No. The A has short A sound, and the E is a schwa. (wag-un)
It has a short A vowel sound and a schwa sound (wag-un).
Yes. The A in flag has a short A sound, as in bag, wag, and lag.
No, the word "flag" contains a long vowel sound, as the "a" is pronounced like "ay" in this case. Short vowel words would include simple words like "cat" or "dog" where the vowel sounds are short and distinct.
The A in wagon has a short A sound, the O has a schwa sound (wag-un).
Practically the same, although a schwa can have an eh, ih, or uh sound. The difference is the lack of stress on a schwa. A good example are the words wagon and gun. Although both have an "un" sound, the word wagon does not stress it, so it does not sound like wah-gun but like wag-un, with the N sound trailing off.
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