"Afraid" does, in the first syllable. The schwa sound is basically anything that says "uh."
No. Only the first A has a schwa sound (unstressed uh). The AI vowel pair has the AY sound. (uh-FRAYED)
The -us in focus has the schwa sound (uhs).
An example of the schwa vowel sound is the sound the letter a makes in the word "about".
The schwa vowel sound in "remember" is the unstressed "uh" sound. It is the most common vowel sound in English and is often found in unstressed syllables.
The schwa vowel sound in "iron" is pronounced as /ə/. It is a mid-central vowel sound that is pronounced with a relaxed mouth position and is the most common vowel sound in English.
No. Only the first A has a schwa sound (unstressed uh). The AI vowel pair has the AY sound. (uh-FRAYED)
The -us in focus has the schwa sound (uhs).
An example of the schwa vowel sound is the sound the letter a makes in the word "about".
The schwa vowel sound in "remember" is the unstressed "uh" sound. It is the most common vowel sound in English and is often found in unstressed syllables.
The schwa vowel sound in "iron" is pronounced as /ə/. It is a mid-central vowel sound that is pronounced with a relaxed mouth position and is the most common vowel sound in English.
The E (er) has a schwa or unstressed (uh) sound in mystery.
No, afraid not. The first A has a schwa sound (uh). The second A is in a vowel pair, AI, with a long A sound (AY). There is no short A (uh-frayed).
The schwa sound is in the second syllable (urd). It is an unstressed sound.
There is none. The O and I in goblin both have short vowel sounds.
It has a long I vowel sound and a schwa (unstressed vowel sound).
No. The schwa is the vowel sound in bird or herd. The vowel sound in puppy is the 'pup tent' or 'turned v' represented by the symbol ʌ
Both A's in America have the schwa, or unstressed sound. The schwa sound shows that a vowel is pronounced "uh", as if the word were "uhmericuh".