In the word "animal," the letter "a" makes the schwa sound. The schwa is represented phonetically as /ə/ and is an unstressed vowel sound typically found in unstressed syllables. In this case, the first "a" in "animal" is pronounced as a schwa.
Horses.
Every animal that has ears of some sort can react to sound.
Narwhal.
the lesser striped crying goat from India is the only land animal that crys
One animal that makes drones are Crickets. Crickets rub their legs together and they make that chirping sound that is familiar related with crickets.
Yes, the second syllable of "region" is unstressed and has a schwa sound.
No, the word "scratch" does not have a schwa sound. The "a" in "scratch" makes a short /æ/ sound.
The schwa sound in English is a neutral, unstressed sound that is similar to the "uh" sound. It is the most common vowel sound in the English language.
e
Schwa is the sound you make when your tongue is limp in the middle of your mouth. If someone asks you a question and you say "uhhh" before you answer, you've made a schwa. It is usually, but not always on the unstressed syllable. For a hint: it's the "o" in melon and "e" in paper.
Say it out loud and listen to yourself for the SCHWAsound in it.
No. The I is a long I but the E is a schwa sound, not a R-controlled vowel.
The "a" with a little "o" on top of it is called a schwa and it produces a short, neutral sound similar to the "u" in "but" or the "a" in "sofa".
Oh, dude, the schwa sound in "banana" is like the "uh" sound you make when you're not really sure what to say. It's that super chill, unstressed sound in the middle syllable that's like, "Eh, I'm just here to fill space, man." So, yeah, next time you say "banana," just remember to give that schwa a little nod of recognition.
You can simulate an unstressed vowel by pronouncing the consonants B and M together. The "uh" sound you hear is the schwa, which can sound like eh, ih, or uh and can be used with consonants such as R (uhr) and T (et/it/ut), where any of the three sounds may be heard in a particular dialect.
You can't hear the 'e'.You'll be surprised to know that there is another vowel in the word that you don't really hear: the first 'a'. Yes, there is a vowel sound, but it is the schwa sound, the sound that most unstressed vowels make. Schwa is heard with many unstressed vowels, whatever the vowel, and they sound virtually identical to each other.
because it wouldnt make sense it would sound funny