There are two syllables. Li-ar.
There are two syllables in the word "liar" (li-ar).
There are four syllables. Pe-cu-liar-ly.
Two: fire-fly.AnswerNo there's three syllables, just clap it out.AnswerTwo. Fire rhymes with hire, wire, and dire. If you make it rhyme with higher, Jaya, or liar, you're mispronouncing fire.To Confirm:There are two syllables. Fire-fly.
The word "choir" can be either one or two syllables, because the O and the I (while not a vowel pair as in "oy") can be pronounced together as a long I. The one-syllable version is the same as "quire" with a KW sound from the QU. This rhymes with "lyre." The two-syllable version is (kwy-ur) with the R having a schwa sound as in "liar." * Lyre and liar are homophones in US English.
A Liar's Autobiography has 240 pages.
There are 3 syllables in symphony:sym/pho/ny
there are 2 syllables in stomach. To see why, search 'How many syllables in attack?'
4 syllables am- phi- bi- an
Awake has two syllables. The syllables are a-wake.
There are 14 syllables.
There are two syllables in "wistfully."
I deleted this answer because liar rhymes with fire, it doesn't rename it.
Happened has two syllables. The syllables are hap-pened.