single, stairway, singer, safety, safely, secure, storage, spitting, sunny, someone, simple
"Spider" is a two-syllable word starting with "s."
In the word "object," the stress is on the first syllable, "ob-."
When forming a possessive noun with a name ending in s, for both one-syllable and multi-syllable names, you typically just add an apostrophe and an s ('s). So, for example, you would write "James's hat" for a one-syllable name and "Charles's car" for a multi-syllable name.
The first word beginning with 's' in most dictionaries is usually "sad."
Substitute.
It goes on top of the letter "a". According to the rules of accentuation, the word árbol is a "grave" word. This means it is a word where the major force during the pronunciation falls over the before last syllable, which in this case is "ar" (the word árbol has two syllables: AR - BOL). You have to place the "acento" if a grave word ends with any letter that IS NOT "n", "s", or a vowel. Arbol ends with l, so it has to have the accent. Hope this helps
Y e s
The natural stress of a word follows two simple rules: If a word ends in any consonant other than n or s, the natural stress will be on the last syllable. If a word ends in a vowel or the letter n or s, the natural stress is on the next‐to‐last syllable.
The word 'Spreading' has two syllables (Spread-ing).
The above in phonetic notation (using - for syllable division) is [mə-stɪɹ-i-əs]. There is another possibility, which is [mɪs-tʰɪɹ-i-əs], with [s] at the end of the first syllable causing the first vowel to be slightly different, and with t now at the beginning of its syllable aspirated (with a puff of air after it), since t must always be aspirated at the beginning of a syllable in English.
The word come(s) has one syllable.
tal because it ends in s
There is only one syllable in the word sleeps. The -s may make it sound like two syllables, but it is only one.
You can add the letter s at the end
The word weeks only has one syllable. The -s sound may make it sound like two syllables, but it is only one.
In the word "object," the stress is on the first syllable, "ob-."
The word beginning is an abstract noun, a word for the start of something.
Love? Maybe. this is Tigolia16's guess.