no it is not because the way you can find out is you can clap and i clapped and it was 2
In English, the second syllable is unstressed. (However, in the phrase borrowed from French, "bon voyage", the first syllable of "voyage" is unstressed.)
Voyage in English has the stress on the first syllable; in French it should be pronounced with the stress on the final syllable. Kind of think of it like this: When you see voyage, does your voice go up of down on the second syllable? It goes down. So it has the stress on the first syllable. I hope I helped!
The stressed part is 'voy'
In English, the first syllable of "voyage" is stressed: VOY-age. In the common borrowed French expression "bon voyage", however, "voyage" is pronounced the way it is in French, with the accent on the second syllable.
In English, first.
first syllable
The stress syllable in the word "butterfly" is on the first syllable, "but".
Shower is a two-syllable word. The stress is on the first syllable: SHOW-er.
The first.
The word "kettle" is a first accented syllable word. The emphasis is placed on the first syllable ("ket-").
The stressed syllable in the word "district" is the first syllable, which is "dis-".
The syllable that is accented in the word "clipper" is the first syllable, "clip."