weighty?
Yes: the vowel in the first syllable (the stressed syllable) is a short E. However, the vowel Y in the second syllable has a long E sound.
No. It's two.
Yes, y is a vowel in heavy because it makes a syllable in this word.
2. Hea-vy.
if it`s a noun or adjective the primary stress will be on the penult( the syllable before the final ) if the vowel is heavy( branching - short vowel+ coda OR diphthong) if it`s not heavy then go to the next left heavy syllable if it`s a verb then the stress will be on the ult (the final syllable ) if it`s heavy secondary stress : a full vowel will have secondary stress unless :it`s in the final syllable
Oh, dude, the unstressed syllable of "metal" is technically the second one, so it's like "met-AL." But hey, who really cares about that stuff, right? Just keep on rockin' with your heavy metal tunes and don't stress about the syllables, man.
A closed syllable. An open syllable. A vowel-consonant-e syllable. A vowel team syllable. A consonant-le syllable. An r-controlled syllable.
The stressed syllable in the word "morning" is the first syllable, which is "mor."
The accented syllable in the word "fierceness" is the first syllable, "fierce."
The accented syllable in "wanders" is the first syllable, "wan."
The stressed syllable in the word "belief" is the first syllable, "be."
The second syllable of unique is a stressed syllable.