The first syllable.
The accent falls on the second syllable in the word "adolescent."
It might depend on the accent, but I would suggest the emphasis is on "nec", unless it is the last word of a question, in which case the emphasis sometimes falls on the "ted".e.g. "We are connected" and "Are we connected?"
In Spanish, the stress accent usually goes on the second-to-last syllable for words that end in a vowel other than -n, -s, or a vowel with an accent mark. So for words that end in -a or -o, the stress accent will fall on the penultimate syllable.
The foot in the word "renew" is a trochee, which consists of a stressed syllable followed by an unstressed syllable. In "renew," the stress falls on the first syllable "re-" and the second syllable "-new" is unstressed.
In the word "emotion," the schwa syllable falls on the first syllable: e-MOH-shun. The schwa sound is represented by the "uh" sound in this word.
No, the stress in the word "carefree" falls on the first syllable. It is pronounced as "CARE-free."
The third syllable: ad·o·les·cent
The accent is in the third syllable. It follows the 'l'. This means that the 'l' is emphasized when spoken.
I hear it as "TEL" to be the accented syllable, but according to Webster's dictionary it can either be accented at TEL or at VIS. TEL is the first one listed and then in the second meaning it accents VIS.
It might depend on the accent, but I would suggest the emphasis is on "nec", unless it is the last word of a question, in which case the emphasis sometimes falls on the "ted".e.g. "We are connected" and "Are we connected?"
The foot in the word "renew" is a trochee, which consists of a stressed syllable followed by an unstressed syllable. In "renew," the stress falls on the first syllable "re-" and the second syllable "-new" is unstressed.
In the word "emotion," the schwa syllable falls on the first syllable: e-MOH-shun. The schwa sound is represented by the "uh" sound in this word.
The word fall has one syllable.
The word fall has one syllable.
Falling is two syllables. Fall-ing
No (spanish accent) puedo esperar Asta chilpayate this is Spanish accent :-)
Very close to the way you would say it in English. The French say their letter "r" differently from English speakers; it's a kind of guttural roll at the back of the mouth.If you were speaking with a French Canadian accent, you would pronounce the last syllable "tin" not "teen", like Kristin except with the accent on the second syllable.
Compound in interest rates is as thus, compounded monthly means,if you get 3 cents interest this month, next month it compounds to 6 cents and so on! The next month 12 cents, depending on your financial institution and the rise and fall of interest rates.