Yes. The U has the short U (uh) sound as in button and gutter.
The short U sound is an "uh" sound indicated by the breve U (ŭ). If the syllable is unstressed, it is the similar uh sound called a schwa (ə).
It is a long U. Some long U's are "yoo" (cute, fuel) and some are "oo" (dune, flute). So-called "long" vowels A, I, E. O, and U "say their names" in English, and there is no English vowel whose name is Oo. "Broad" U might be a better term for the vowel in ruler, meaning a rounded back vowel with the tongue down.
No
Indians acctually did churn butter. It just wasn't that important. And I can't Believe no one answered this!
Yes - butter existed long before the 1930s - it was present long before the middle ages.
It is a short U sound (frum).
It has no U sound : the i has a short i sound and the E has a short E sound.
No, the word "stunt" does not have a short "U" sound. The "u" in "stunt" is pronounced with a short "uh" sound.
Yes. The U has a short U as in bug and muggy. (The Y has a long E sound.)
Yes, the word "bug" has a short U sound, not a long U sound.
Dull has a short U (uh) sound.
The U has a short U sound as in tuck and hub.
No, the word "sun" does not have the short sound of U. It has the short sound of the vowel U as in "fun" or "cut."
The U in skunk has a short U (uh) vowel sound, as in skull and sunk.
No, unicorn does not start with a short U sound. It starts with a long U sound.
Yes. The A in what has a short U (uh) or short O (aah) vowel sound.
Yes, the "u" in "musty" has a short "u" sound, the same as the "u" in "must".