The word green only has one syllable.
Bike just got one syllable.
The word write has got one syllable.
It has 2 syllables. Got-ten.
pain has one syllable. If you say pain with your mouth count how many times your mouth opened on the word and you got how any syllables for that word.
When the word "rebel" is used as a noun ("The rebel got away"), the first syllable is stressed and the second is relatively unstressed. When the word "rebel" is used as a verb (The slaves decided to rebel) the second syllable is stressed and the first syllable us unstressed.
human is a closed syllable word
Yes it has one syllable.
for got ten
Well, honey, a morpheme is the smallest unit of meaning in a language, like "un-" or "happy," while a syllable is a unit of sound with a vowel sound at its center, like "hap-py." So basically, a morpheme is all about meaning, and a syllable is all about sound. Got it, sugar?
From the French word "vert" and "mont" meaning "These Green Mountains"
1 syllable.
A syllable is a unit of organization for a group of speech sounds. For example, the word "potatoes" is composed of three syllables: "po", "ta", and "toes". A syllable is typically made up of a syllable nucleus (typically vowel(s)) with optional initial and final margins (typically consonants).