It is the pronunciation of the last syllable in words such as "water" and "leader".
No. The I is a long I but the E is a schwa sound, not a R-controlled vowel.
The word another has three "uh" sounds: the A, O, and E. The stress is on the O syllable, where NOTH is heard as "nuh-th" (short U). The A has an ordinary schwa sound (uh) and the E has a schwa-R sound (uhr).
No, the word door has a long O combined with the R (dohr).
Yes. In fact it has two. The letter i has the schwa (unstressed) sound, and so does the second A, because the R is in the last syllable with Y (ree).
The schwa sound in "about" is in the second syllable, represented by the unstressed "schwa" written as "/ə/". So, it sounds like /ə-bout/.
it means a baseword that is a a short word plus a suffix that makes it schwa sound
The A has the schwa (unstressed sound) which is actually a schwa-R (ehr/uhr).
No. The E followed by the R has a schwa-R sound (ur).
There is no schwa sound. The A is part of the R sound (umlaut A), the I and the E are short vowel sounds. (ar-ki-tekt)
The schwa vowel sound makes an "uh" sound (as in "bug," "rug" or "above"). For the word "industry," the schwa sound is the u --> indUHstry.
No. The I is a long I but the E is a schwa sound, not a R-controlled vowel.
The "schwa" (ə) is an unstressed "eh, ih, uh" sound. The related schwa-R (ər) sound is "er or ur" which is the unstressed form of the caret or circumflex U (û) followed by an R.
Its actually an R but its soccer match
No. The E has a schwa-R (ur) or unstressed sound, not a short E.
No, as there are no A's in the word. It has an OU/OW sound and a schwa-R (ur).
As an unstressed syllable, the letter 'r' (which does not have to be a vowel in the English language, just as unstressed syllable)
No. There is no E or E sound. The I has a short I sound and the A is a schwa-R (ur).