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9 Fun Facts About the Schwa

We all know that English spelling is rarely a good guide to pronunciation. One big reason for this
is the prevalence of schwa in the spoken language. Thats why dictionaries and other written
guides to pronunciation make use of a special symbol to represent the schwa sound. It looks like
this: an upside down e. But what is schwa anyway? Here are nine things to help
you get to know this very important vowel.
1. Any written vowel can be a spoken schwa.

A schwa is the uh sound found in an unstressed syllable. For example, the first syllable in
amazing (-MA-zing), the first syllable in tenacious (t-NA-cious), the second syllable in
replicate (RE-pl-cate), the second syllable in percolate (PER-c-late), the first syllable in
supply (s PLY), the first syllable in syringe (s-RINGE). Thats a written A, E, I, O, U and
even a Y coming out as schwa in the spoken version.
2. Its the most common vowel sound in English.

And this can make things very hard for English learners, because we dont represent it in regular
writing. You have to use clues about stress and syllable structure to figure out where to put it.
3. The word schwa comes from Hebrew.

In Hebrew writing, shva is a vowel diacritic that can be written under letters to indicate an eh
sound (which is not the same as our schwa). The term was first used in linguistics by 19th
century Germany philologists, which is why we use the German spelling, "schwa."
4. The symbol was invented to show how people really talked.

The upside down e was first used as a symbol for the schwa sound by Johann Schmeller in his
1821 grammar of Bavarian German. Because he was describing the specific properties of a
particular dialect, he needed a way to represent actual pronunciation.

5. Before people started calling it schwa in English (around 1895) it had


a lot of nicknames.

Its been called the murmur vowel, the indeterminate vowel, the neutral vowel, the obscure
vowel, and the natural vowel.
6. English has a tendency to delete a syllable with a schwa.

What happened to the third syllable in the following words? Caramel (car-mel), separate (seprate), different (dif-rent), chocolate (choc-late), camera (cam-ra). They fell victim to a terrible
disease called schwa syncope (or schwa deletion). Actually, its not so terrible, and it happens in
lots of languages. A schwa syllable following the syllable that bears the main stress says, well
Im not really needed here anyway and skips town.
7. But English sometimes has a tendency to stick in extra schwa syllables.

In some dialects a schwa shows up to help bust up difficult consonant clusters. This process,
called schwa epenthesis, can turn realtor into real--tor, athlete into ath--lete, nuclear into nucy-ler, and film into fi-lm. It can also come in handy in drawing out words for dramatic effect,
as in c-raaaaaa-zy!
8. Schwa is so prevalent because English is a stress-timed language

Some languages are syllable-timed, like Spanish, where each syllable is roughly the same length,
giving the impression of a steady machine-gun rhythm. English is a stress-timed language,
meaning that the rhythmic impression is based on the regular timing of stress peaks, not
syllables. If you want to speed up in Spanish, you shorten the length of all the syllables. If you
want to speed up in English, you close the distance between stressed syllables. How? By greatly
reducing the unstressed syllables. What vowel do unstressed syllables tend to get? Schwa. Heres
a good explanation of stress-timing with examples.
9. Its the laziest sound there is.

Which is not a value judgment! I love schwa! But of all the sounds we use, it demands the least
of us. All you have to do to make a schwa is start up the vocal cords. Other sounds require you to
raise or lower the tongue, or move it forward or backward. They ask you to move your lips, or
open your jaw. The schwa just is. Serene and undemanding. The vibration of air through the
body to the outside world. The essence of speech itself.
http://mentalfloss.com/article/56821/9-fun-facts-about-schwa

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