admire-Admiration, Invite-Invintation, Oppose-Opposition, Compete-Compotition, Define-Definition, Compose-Compostion, Preside- President,
The A has an unstressed (schwa) sound, the O has a long O or caret O sound (or/aw) and the E is also a schwa (ent/int). The pronunciation sounds like (uh-sort-mint).
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.
There are three vowels but two are unstressed or schwa sounds. The first A has a short A sound, and the I and A have (ih/uh) sounds.
The vowels in lion are a long I sound and a schwa or unstressed sound (ly-un).
The schwa is the upside-down 'e' in phonics, and is used for vowels that makes sounds that are not their long and short sounds. I believe the schwa in 'syllable' is the 'a.' (Sil-AH-bohl).
It has a short A sound and an unstressed A (schwa). A similar word is palace.
No. Money is a noun. Money has two vowels 'o' and 'ey'. The 'o' has a schwa vowel sound, and the 'ey' has a long e sound
The vowel in "buzz' is a schwa, neither "long" nor "short" (inadequate terms to describe English vowels). Whether the syllable having a schwa vowel is long or short itself depends on whether its final consonant is voiced or unvoiced, respectively. Having the voiced zz for a final consonant, buzz is long syllable.
There are five vowels. The first O has a long O (oh) sound, the second is an unstressed or schwa sound, and the third is another long O. The I is a short I, despite the fact that the E is silent.
The letters EAU have a long U (YOO) vowel sound (it says its name). The other vowels (I and second U) are both usually schwa sounds, unstressed.
There are three vowels and three vowel sounds, two of them long vowel sounds, I and E. The A has a schwa or unstressed (uh) sound.
long vowels and short vowels are both just vowels they can't have more or less of themselves