The word "kind" contains only one syllable.
A syllable is the smallest phonological building block of language. In most cases, a syllable contains one (or two if complimentary) vowels and additional consonants. In this case, "i" is the syllabo-nucleic vowel, the initial consonant is "k" and the final consonants are "nd."
In the word "kind," there is only one syllable.
There are 14 syllables.
2 syllables
3 syllables.
Syllables: 4
In the word "kind," there is only one syllable.
one syllable
nine
The word "hearts" has one syllable.
Daybreak has two syllables: day-break.
The phrase "an act of random kindness everyday" has 10 syllables. An - act - of - ran-dom - kind-ness - eve-ry-day.
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."
There are 3 syllables in symphony:sym/pho/ny
there are 2 syllables in stomach. To see why, search 'How many syllables in attack?'