run, jump, sit, a, the, it, has, do, does, did, make, split, etc.
China (China is a pronoun)
canal
timer
ocean
dozen
Are all examples of five letter words with two syllables and are all nouns
butterfly
slipper
table
Quitted
Examples of primary stress words include "happen," "potato," "elephant," and "analyze." These words have the primary stress on the first syllable.
The stressed syllable is the syllable that is emphasized when it is spoken. Some words have more than one stressed syllable, so the primary stress is the most emphasized syllable, the secondary stress is the second most emphasized, and the tertiary stress is the third most emphasized.
For knowledgeable, the first syllable.For perseverance, the primary stress is on the third syllable (VEER), with a secondary stress on the first syllable as purr-seh-VEER-ens. (sibilant S as in tense).
Examples of words that stress on the first syllable include "happy," "apple," "kitten," and "banana."
Some examples of words with primary stress on the third syllable include "university," "electricity," and "municipality."
Some examples of words with stress on the first syllable are "happy," "banana," "elephant," "family," and "guitar."
The primary stress in English words is typically placed on the syllable that is pronounced with the most emphasis or force. This stress can often change the meaning of a word. For example, in the word "record," the stress is placed on the first syllable when it is used as a noun ("RE-cord"), but on the second syllable when used as a verb ("re-CORD").
Some examples of words with secondary stress include "environment," "opportunity," "management," and "assistance." These words have stress on the second syllable after the primary stress.
The first syllable in stressed is stress. The second one is -sed.
In English, the stress in a word generally falls on the first syllable. However, there are exceptions where the stress falls on the second syllable, such as in words like "reply" or "delay."
In the words 'diplomat', 'comfortable', 'diplomacy', and 'refer', the main stress falls on the first syllable. In 'successful' and 'increase', the stress is on the second syllable. In 'accumulative', the stress is on the third syllable.
"Plato" has stress on the first syllable (but "platonic" does not have stress on the first syllable). Similarly, compare: photograph (photography) feral (ferocious) Paris (parisian) atom (atomic) continent (contagious) constellation (constabulary) paranormal (perambulate) mermaid (meringue)