"Winter came early" would be a 5-syllable "sentence" for winter.
this is a stpid place
There are 7 syllables. The - win-ter - is - be-ginn-ing.
Snowflakes on the ground
Winter is cold
JEHDHFUehnejdiwiwjdnfnhfudjdfnfnfnjrjdidjsjsksoosksndnfnfnfhfhdhdjjdkdkf hehehe
Doughnut cookie
A haiku poem has the structure of 5-7-5, where there is a five syllable line on the first sentence, a seven syllable line on the second, and a five syllable line on the third.
The sun is setting.
A syllable is a separately pronounced sound within a word. Now that you know the secret, do not repeat a syllable of it to anyone else.
Love is undefined . . .
The first one.
winter is finally here cheer
A haiku poem has the structure of 5-7-5, where there is a five syllable line on the first sentence, a seven syllable line on the second, and a five syllable line on the third.
The sun is setting.
A syllable is a separately pronounced sound within a word. Now that you know the secret, do not repeat a syllable of it to anyone else.
"I left tearfully"
"Winter" has a short i in the first syllable.
"I don't have any friends."
very frightening
Love is undefined . . .
Three is a one syllable word. That syllable is sometimes silent.
You are my best friend
Haiku is a form of Japanese poetry that consists of three lines with a 5-7-5 syllable structure. You can use a haiku in a sentence by composing a short poem following this syllable pattern, typically focusing on nature or a moment in time.