Here are three proven schemes:
# Remove the source of stress # Distract yourself # Reframe/change your thinking 1) Try breaking the thing that is stressing you into bite-sized chunks that seem more manageable i.e. produce a check-list and plan when you are going to tick the items of that list.
2) Take your mind off whatever it is that is stressing you out by doing something unrelated to it. Exercise is a good option as the endorphins released will help relax you (a recent study with rats showed that social exercise e.g. team games, produce a much greater endorphin release). Alternatively, watch a movie, listen to music, play a game, cook a meal, whatever takes your mind off the source of stress. 3) Ask yourself some questions like - is your initial reaction reasonable, realistic, in perspective? Or have you been knocked off balance or caught by surprise and your reaction is similarly out of proportion? Will this seem such a big deal in two days/months/years? Is this a temporary setback rather than the end of your hopes and dreams? Think of a creative way to turn this around, consider incidents as challenges rather than as defeats.
One stressed syllable followed by two unstressed is called a dactyl, and a line of verse written in that style is called dactyllic. Here are the other kinds of metrical feet as well: iamb: unstressed, stressed trochee: stressed, unstressed dactyl: stressed, unstressed, unstressed anapest: unstressed, unstressed, stressed amphibrach: unstressed, stressed, unstressed amphimacer: stressed, unstressed, stressed bacchius: unstressed, stressed, stressed antibacchius: stressed, unstressed, unstressed pyrrhus: unstressed, unstressed spondee: stressed, stressed tribrach: unstressed, unstressed, unstressed molossus: stressed, stressed, stressed
The unstressed syllable in "germination" is "na." It is heard less prominently compared to the stressed syllables "ger" and "mi."
In the word "silver," the unstressed syllable is "ver." The emphasis is on the first syllable, "sil-" while the second syllable "ver" is unstressed.
Only the first syllable of "actually" is stressed, so all the vowels in the following syllables are unstressed: the "u", the second "a", and the "y". - The second a is unstressed. An unstressed vowel is pronounced "uhh." There is a difference between an unstressed vowel and and unstressed syllable.
The unstressed syllable is "im".
Both u and a are unstressed.
The first and third syllables are unstressed.
The 'a' and the second 'o' are both unstressed.
An unstressed vowel is a vowel in the word you don't sound.
unstressed syallablesi dont know
des is unstressed pair is stressed
its the "i" that's unstressed