Citations:schwa

(of a vowel sound) to be reduced to schwa

 * 1996, Bill VanPatten, Input processing and grammar instruction in second language acquisition,, page 139
 * Note that the input data contain very weak and nonsalient object pronouns in preverbal position: The vowel is generally schwaed and the object pronoun elides with verbs that begin with a vowel


 * 2012, Various Boone’s Authors, Boone’s Dock Review 1.2,, page 139
 * Three phonemes linked together, and what phonics teachers call an “unfair” word because the o is schwaed despite the e at the end.


 * 2013, John W. Schwieter, Innovative Research and Practices in Second Language Acquisition and Bilingualism,, page 6
 * In the phonological domain, for example, the speaker of English “knows” that schwaing vowels is possible in unstressed syllables but impossible in stressed syllables.