stress word is that you said louder or stronger.
not stressed
yes, mostly content words are stressed. content words are words that have meaning. They can be compared to grammatical words which are structural, nouns and adjectives ,main verbs usually content words.
thomas yates
Every word has a stress. Since "sun" is only one syllable, it is stressed.
stressed syllables are the syllables within a word that have the most emphasis when spokenfor example:other - the syllable "oth" is stressed and the syllable "er" is not because "er" is pronounced less that "oth"the "er" tends to sound as if it were falling away at the end of the wordcompound words tend to be double stressed because both syllables are pronounced equallyfor examplechildhood- both "child" and "hood" are pronounced fullyyou can tell which syllable is stressed by saying the word naturallyIn words of two syllables or more, at least one of the syllables is usually pronounced with extra emphasis. We can divide syllables into stressed and unstressed categories.
not stressed
It refers to words that are stressed on the first syllable.
Monosyllabic (one syllable) words. There is only one syllable so the whole word is stressed.
stress, dress, rest, Stressed spelled backwards is desserts!
It is called emphasis or stress in speech when sounds or words are given more prominence or importance than others. This can help convey meaning or emotion in communication.
The first syllable in stressed is stress. The second one is -sed.
conference
yes, mostly content words are stressed. content words are words that have meaning. They can be compared to grammatical words which are structural, nouns and adjectives ,main verbs usually content words.
In English words which provide new information are stressed more heavily than structural words like prepositions, articles and modal verbs. For example in the sentence: "John went to the bank with Sally" the words John, bank, and Sally will always be stressed more heavily than the words to, the, and with.
I do not know of a specific name for a word's stressed syllable. However, sometimes people use the phrase "accented syllable" instead of "stressed syllable."
thomas yates
incomprehensible, parliamentarian, antediluvian