This a very interesting question!
marshmallow
There are four vowel sounds in the word marshmallow! And certain parts of the word require different emphasis. In fact three different volume/stress levels are required in order to say marshmallow correctly.
Also, US (North American) and GB (British English) pronounciations and syllable stress patterns differ significantly from each other!
---- North American English (US)
Vowel sounds:
* The first a is pronounced like the a in arm: = 'marsh' (rhymes with 'harsh') * The middle vowel, a, is pronounced like the e in wet: = 'meh' * The o is pronounced like the o in go, and the w is pronounced like the uin glue. * The o and u vowel sounds are joined together, so the final syllable is pronounced with a sliding 'oh-oo' sound, just like end of the word = 'low' Emphasis/Stress:
For breaks and stress, the word has two parts: marsh-mehlow
Both syllables must begin with a stronger or stressed sound, and in North American English (US), the first syllable is stressed more strongly than the stress required at tghe beginning of the second syllable: marsh-mehlow
---- British English (GB)
Vowel sounds:
* The first a is pronounced like the a in arm: = 'marsh' (rhymes with 'harsh') * In Received Pronunciation (RP), the r is not pronounced, it is a silent letter, though in some regional dialects/accents it is pronounced. In RP, mar is pronounced with the vowel sound of tah, Ra, etc. = 'mah', -->'mahsh'
* The middle vowel, a, is pronounced like the a in cat, mat, sat: = 'ma' * The o is pronounced like the o in go, and the w is pronounced like the u in glue. * The o and u vowel sounds are joined together, so the final syllable is pronounced as it is written: = 'low' Emphasis/Stress:
For breaks and stress, the word has two parts: mahsh-malow
Both syllables must begin with a stronger or stressed sound, but in British English (GB), it is the second syllable that is stressed more strongly than the stress on the first syllable: mahsh-malow
---- For phonetic spellings of this word, an American English dictionary will show US pronunciation, and a British English dictionary will show GB pronunciation.
---- For more information and sound-samples of US pronunciation, see Related links below.
No, the word marshmallow is a concrete noun; a word for a plant or a candy; a word for a physical thing.
Marshmallow
Albustix pronounce
How do you pronounce Baekje.
Brin is how you pronounce it
ice-iss (the second "s" is meant to be there)
If you are saying smooth, it's the same way. Smores, even though there is an apostraphe there, you still pronounce it smores, not samores.
Marshmallow in spanish is simply "marshmallow" Its just pronouced different.Translation: Bon bon
I would pronounce what you have here as "try fear nee a" . If you made typo and meant Tryphaena, it would be pronounced "Try fane a".
That would depend on the make of the marshmallow gun, the size of the marshmallow, and what is used to propel the marshmallow. A pump action marshmallow gun could launch a regular sized marshmallow 30 feet. If one makes a marshmallow shooter that depends on blowing into the tube, the distance would depend on how hard one can blow.
Marshmallow in Japanese, is mashumaro!
No, Marshmallow is a suspension.
When you plop the marshmallow into your hot chocolate the marshmallow absorbs the hot chocolate. When you do that the marshmallow gets soggy
Type /join lowe and then you do the quest called Marshmallow on a Stick and find a stick and a marshmallow within the area. You can get it roasted with a flame by doing the Roasted Marshmallow quest, all you need is the Marshmallow on a Stick.
The density of a marshmallow is about .37g/mL.
A marshmallow is a sweet confectionery.
You can buy marshmallow in anystore