Schwa
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In
linguistics and
phonology, the
schwa is the
vowel sound in many lightly pronounced unaccented syllables in English words of more than one syllable. It is most easily described as sounding like the
British English "er" or the
American English "uh". It is written as the
symbol ə (a rotated e). It is the most common vowel sound in the
English language. Its sound depends on the adjacent
consonants and it is a very short neutral vowel sound.
It is a characteristic of English (and the English accent in other languages) that unaccented neutral vowel sounds, especially before 'r' or 'l', tend to become a schwa. A schwa sound can therefore be represented in English by any vowel. In most
dialects, for example, the schwa sound is found in the following words:
- The a in about is a schwa \n* The e in synthesis is a schwa \n* In American and Australian English, the i in decimal is a schwa (not in British English)\n* The o in harmony is a schwa \n* The u in medium is a schwa \n* The y in syringe is a schwa
Authorities vary somewhat in the range of what is considered a schwa sound, but the above examples are generally accepted. This vowel is a consequence of the rhythm of the English language, that makes a great contrast between stressed syllables and unstressed syllables.
For non-English speakers, it may be useful to know that the sound is very similar to a short
French unaccented
e. It is a central, half-open vowel, exactly in the middle of the
International phonetic alphabet vowel chart.
Quite a few languages have a schwa sound. It is almost always unstressed, though
Bulgarian is one language that does allow stressed schwas.
The
Catalan schwa occurs, as in English, as an unstressed "a".
Some browser fonts will show the schwa symbol here: ə. Others may show either a box, a question mark, or capital Y.
The
word "schwa" (
shəwa, later
shəva) originally referred to one of the vowel points used with the
Hebrew alphabet, which looks like a vertical pair of dots under a letter. This sign has two uses, one to indicate the schwa vowel-sound and one to indicate the complete absence of a vowel. In practice these two uses do not conflict.
The schwa symbol is used in
Azeri as a
letter, representing a front
a vowel. But using ə, Azeri have problems with Turkish encoding. So, they used ä in their texts before Windows NT appeared.
The schwa symbol also is used in some Cyrillic alphabets including:
Kazakh,
Bashkir, and
Udmurt. It was also used in
Tatar,
Azeri, and
Turkmenian, before those languages switched to the
Latin alphabet.
The
Turkish alphabet contains a separate letter "ı" ("i" without the dot) to represent the schwa sound. This makes it easier for children to spell a word they have heard correctly.
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