The A at the beginning of the word.
Yes, the word "alone" contains a schwa sound. In English, the schwa sound is often represented by the unstressed vowel sound in words like "alone," where it is heard as a short and obscure "uh" sound at the end of the word.
Yes. The A has an unstressed sound (uh) at the beginning of alone.
At the beginning. The A has an (uh) sound that is unstressed.
The schwa sound in "about" is in the second syllable, represented by the unstressed "schwa" written as "/ə/". So, it sounds like /ə-bout/.
There is indeed a schwa sound in the word 'open'. [ˈəʊ.pən]
Yes. The A has a schwa, or unstressed (uh) in "alone."
Yes, the word "alone" contains a schwa sound. In English, the schwa sound is often represented by the unstressed vowel sound in words like "alone," where it is heard as a short and obscure "uh" sound at the end of the word.
Yes. The A has an unstressed sound (uh) at the beginning of alone.
no it doesn't
At the beginning. The A has an (uh) sound that is unstressed.
Yes, some garages does have the schwa sound
The word reason where is the schwa sound
there is no schwa sound in brilliant
Yes, some garages does have the schwa sound
There is no "schwa" sound in the word mountain.
The schwa sound is the u or the e
The A has the schwa (unstressed sound) which is actually a schwa-R (ehr/uhr).