Yes. Every word has at least one syllable. Gain has one syllable.
a-gain
2 a-gain.
In the word "again," the stress can vary depending on the context and regional accents. In American English, it is commonly stressed on the second syllable, pronounced as "uh-GAIN." In other dialects, it may be pronounced with stress on the first syllable, as "A-gain."
There are two syllables like so: a-gain.
A closed syllable. An open syllable. A vowel-consonant-e syllable. A vowel team syllable. A consonant-le syllable. An r-controlled syllable.
The term for a metrical foot with one stressed and one unstressed syllable is an iamb. Each pair of syllables in the word "again" is an example of an iamb: a-GAIN.
The stressed syllable in the word "morning" is the first syllable, which is "mor."
The accented syllable in "wanders" is the first syllable, "wan."
The accented syllable in the word "fierceness" is the first syllable, "fierce."
The stressed syllable in the word "belief" is the first syllable, "be."
The second syllable of unique is a stressed syllable.
there are three in the word syllable