The word itself is one syllable
There is one open syllable - cli
The word "humus" is pronounced, in English, as follows: HYOU-mus.Specifically, it is a case of pronouncing a two-syllable word. The initial letter "h" is sounded and glided into the second letter "u," which is pronounced in the same, long-sounding way as the second person pronoun "you." In the second syllable "-mus," the vowel "u" has the same, short sound as the "u" sound in the first person plural object pronoun "us."It is the first syllable that gets the stress.
the desert is the desert
There are 5 deserts located in the southwestern U.S.: Mohave Desert Great Basin Desert Chihuahuan Desert Colorado Plateau Desert Sonoran Desert
The Atacama Desert.the atacama desert
The primary syllable of "desert" is "des."
First syllable.
Trick question! Either syllable can be accented in desert. If you accent the first syllable, it's an arid place, possibly with cacti. If you accent the second syllable, it's a verb meaning to abandon or leave alone.
First syllable if used as a noun, second syllable if used as a verb.
The accented syllable in a word is typically the one that is pronounced with more emphasis or force. It may not always follow a specific rule and can vary depending on the word. You can usually determine the accented syllable by pronouncing the word and noting which syllable sounds stronger or has a higher pitch.
The first.
The stress in a prefix used as a noun typically falls on the first syllable.
Conflict can be a noun or a verb. As a noun, the accent is on the first syllable. As a verb, the accent is on the second syllable.
Initial-stress-derived- noun
It is both. The spelling is the same, but the pronunciation is different. For the verb form, the second syllable is stressed. For the noun form, the first syllable is stressed.
It can be either. Usually, when it's a noun, the accent is on the first syllable. When it's a verb, the accent is on the second syllable. Please in-SERT the IN-sert.
The word "address" can be stressed on either the first or second syllable, depending on the context. As a noun, the stress is typically on the first syllable (AD-dress), while as a verb, the stress is usually on the second syllable (uh-DRESS).