There are two answers: "entertainment" and "entertainments". How can that be?
Well, the word "entertainment" is one of those nouns that can be used in two ways, with subtly different meanings.
# "Entertainment" can be an abstract noun, like "happiness". In this form, the word roughly means "enjoyment". You might switch on the TV hoping for some entertainment. But if you find two programs enjoyable, you cannot talk of having found two entertainments, any more than you can talk of two happinesses. In this sense, entertainment has no plural form, just like "happiness" and "fun".
# Entertainment can also have a more concrete form, in which it refers to a particular offering, like a show in a theater, or a concert. The word usually refers to an organized, structured affair. If you go to two shows, you could say that you have been to see two entertainments.
So there are two answers. But you have to treat the two forms of the word differently, because one is a non-count noun, and the other is a countable one. You could describe a town as offering "plenty of entertainment", or as putting on "many entertainments".
The correct syllabification of the word Entertainment is
en-ter-tain-ment 2 syllables
a
The correct syllabification of suffer is suff/er.
The word dream is just one syllable.
ter-ri-ble is the syllabification of terrible.
The correct spelling is entertainment.
There is some confusion on words like this, because different regions pronounce it differently. There are some areas of Philadelphia that pronounce "go" as a multi-syllabic word. But syllabification doesn't depend on pronunciation. "Cruel" is a two-syllable word. cru-el
The correct syllabification of the word VITAL is vi-tal 2 Syllables
The correct syllabification of suffer is suff/er.
Prop-er-ly
jam-bo-ree
Sat - ur - day is the correct syllabification of Saturday.
di-vide
The word dream is just one syllable.
ter-ri-ble is the syllabification of terrible.
Pre op er a tive . This is called syllabification .
The word "pious" is syllabified as pi-ous.
There are six syllables. Syl-lab-i-fi-ca-tion.
The word "debate" is divided into two syllables: de-bate.