Examples of words with stress on the 4th syllable include "Criminálity" and "Individuality."
Examples of words that use stress are "photograph," "television," and "invisible." These words have stress placed on different syllables, making each word distinct and easily recognizable when pronounced.
Some examples of words with secondary stress include "environment," "opportunity," "management," and "assistance." These words have stress on the second syllable after the primary stress.
The Luhya word for the English word 'stress' is "nyasia".
The stress mark in Spanish is called a "tilde" and is placed on the stressed syllable of a word. The rules for placing the stress mark vary depending on the type of word (agudas, llanas, esdrújulas), but generally, you'll find them in words that don't follow the standard rules of stress placement or to differentiate between homonyms.
Some examples of words with stress on the last syllable are: "police," "debate," "survive," and "beyond."
One example of shifting stress within a word is the noun "record" versus the verb "récord." In the noun form, the stress is on the first syllable (RE-cord), while in the verb form, the stress shifts to the second syllable (re-CORD). Another example is the noun "permit" (PER-mit) versus the verb "permit" (per-MIT), where the stress changes depending on the part of speech.
The stress mark in Spanish is called a "tilde" and is placed on the stressed syllable of a word. The rules for placing the stress mark vary depending on the type of word (agudas, llanas, esdrújulas), but generally, you'll find them in words that don't follow the standard rules of stress placement or to differentiate between homonyms.
Emphatic stress is a special stress that is given by the speaker to some word in a sentence, usually to single out, compare, correct, or clarify things.
Examples of words that use stress are "photograph," "television," and "invisible." These words have stress placed on different syllables, making each word distinct and easily recognizable when pronounced.
Secondary stress refers to the second syllable in a word that has less emphasis than the first. The second syllable must have an accent mark in order to be considered a secondary stress.
Syllable - you say SYLL-able, not syll-ABLE.
The stress is on the 4th syllable, the syllable before the -ic. This is the rule with most words that end in -ic, such as in heroic and athletic as well.
Some examples of chronic stress include job stress or long term illness. Grief or the death of a loved one is also chronic stress.
The Luhya word for the English word 'stress' is "nyasia".
Using the word as a noun the stress is on the first syllable. Using the word as a verb the stress is on the second syllable.
The stress in the word "several" falls on the first syllable, pronounced as SEV-er-al.
The stress in the word "interpret" falls on the second syllable, which is "pre."