The word is all one syllable.
no word it isn't possible because if you take away one syllable from a five syllable word you get a four syllable word and there is no such thing as a "no syllable word"
Three is a one syllable word. That syllable is sometimes silent.
Crumb is a one syllable word.
No, it is a two syllable word: stead-y
there are three in the word syllable
The trochee is a two-syllable foot that stresses the first syllable, as in the word
The second syllable is stressed in the word footprint
caput
The word "foot" has one syllable.
The term is "iamb." It is a metrical foot in poetry consisting of one unstressed syllable followed by one stressed syllable, such as in the word "begin."
An iambic foot has an unaccented syllable followed by an accented one.
no word it isn't possible because if you take away one syllable from a five syllable word you get a four syllable word and there is no such thing as a "no syllable word"
A trochaic foot typically consists of one stressed syllable followed by one unstressed syllable, making it a two-syllable unit.
The word bruised only has one syllable. This means the whole word is the syllable and so there are no syllable breaks.
The word page has one syllable. This means the entire word is the syllable and so there are no syllable breaks.
No. The word 'their' has one syllable.
first syllable