The word is stressed or not depends on the sentence. It it is important then there is stress on word.
The word "run" has one syllable, and the vowel sound is stressed.
The stressed syllable in desperate is the first one, 'des.' The other two are not stressed.
Stressed syllables are emphasized more in speech than unstressed syllables.
The unstressed syllable in "achieve" is the first syllable, "a-". It is pronounced quickly and with less emphasis compared to the stressed syllable "-chieve".
The first syllable is stressed. The second is unstressed.
Take and word are stressed, the rest unstressed.
One stressed syllable followed by two unstressed is called a dactyl, and a line of verse written in that style is called dactyllic. Here are the other kinds of metrical feet as well: iamb: unstressed, stressed trochee: stressed, unstressed dactyl: stressed, unstressed, unstressed anapest: unstressed, unstressed, stressed amphibrach: unstressed, stressed, unstressed amphimacer: stressed, unstressed, stressed bacchius: unstressed, stressed, stressed antibacchius: stressed, unstressed, unstressed pyrrhus: unstressed, unstressed spondee: stressed, stressed tribrach: unstressed, unstressed, unstressed molossus: stressed, stressed, stressed
The word is stressed or not depends on the sentence. It it is important then there is stress on word.
A trochee is a word containing two syllables, the first stressed and the second unstressed (such as FORest). "Beautiful" has three syllables in the stressed-unstressed-unstressed pattern (BEAUtiful), which makes it a dactyl.
...Iamb (Iambic)Unstressed + Stressed.........Two Syllables...Trochee (Trochaic)Stressed + Unstressed.........Two Syllables...Spondee (Spondaic)Stressed + Stressed.........Two Syllables...Anapest (Anapestic)Unstressed + Unstressed + Stressed.........Three Syllables...Dactyl (DactylicStressed + Unstressed + Unstressed.........Three Syllables
The word "run" has one syllable, and the vowel sound is stressed.
The stressed syllable in desperate is the first one, 'des.' The other two are not stressed.
stressed
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.
Stressed
Stressed