I'd say the syllables were fam-i-ly.

Interested in Language
Why do we pronounce ''family'' as a /ˈfæməli/, but not /'feɪməli/? Stressed syllable ends with a vowel, but why do we pronounce it as a closed type of syllable?
I'd say the syllables were fam-i-ly.
Typoman - writer of rongs
Or fam-ly in American English. We don't pronounce the middle syllable unless we're speaking very slowly and carefully.
I am not a teacher.
That's also true of BrE or many speakers.
Typoman - writer of rongs
I'm in the habit of pronouncing all three syllables: fam-i-ly.
I might sometimes leave out the middle syllable. I'm not sure.
Not a professional teacher
I'm not a teacher. I speak American English. I've tutored writing at the University of Southern Maine and have done a good deal of copy editing and writing, occasionally for publication.
When you say "closed type of syllable" I understand you mean that the syllable contains a short vowel.
There's no rule that says short vowels can't be stressed. Who told you there is?
NOT A TEACHER. Translator and editor, and I hold a TESOL certificate. Native speaker of American English (West Coast)
In phrases like "family law" and "family matters" I do give it three syllables but the "i" is so extremly short it almost vanishes. Most Canadians do the same I think.