Yes.
It rhymes with tough
None of them.
The second syllable.
The first syllable has the primary stress, and the third (and last) syllable has a secondary stress.
The word "low" has one syllable.
fol low
No, allow is stressed on the second syllable.
The word low has one syllable.
Yes, it does. Two friends of mine and a band my dad's store stocks use the pronunciation "BAR-low".Actually no it doesn't it has to end in arlow to rhyme, like, Carlo."Barlow" does end in "arlow." "Carlo" doesn't, but they both rhyme with "no." Pronunciations aren't uniquely identified by their spellings, and spellings aren't uniquely identified by their pronunciations. There are a lot of exceptions to the rules in English, plus they vary geographically.When the last syllable rhymes, it is called a terminal rhyme. When all syllables rhyme - i.e. only the initial consonant sound varies - it is called a full rhyme. Any less than a full rhyme is a partial rhyme which includes terminal rhymes. When the vowel sound in two words is the same, but the consonant sounds on either side don't match, it is called assonance.
low
Yes pillow is stressed on the first syllable (pil-oh)
falling intonation literally means the feature of some accents of English where statements have a falling intonation patterns or low fundamental frequency or a low tone in the final syllable of the utterance.example:I'm not going.-the last syllable of the word in the exmple is low tone.ryt?.it should not pronounced as or the intonation should not be rising..gets?by the way add me in fs: nami_masachika@yahoo.com