Antepenultimate.
"arear"
Antepenult
The word forbade has two syllables. The syllables in the word are for-bade.
Antepenult is a word that fits this description.
If you refer to words with different meanings according to whether they receive the stress on the first or the second syllable, such as permit, perfume and content, for example, the general rule is that when the first syllable is stressed ( PERmit, PERfume, CONtent ) the word is a noun, and when the second syllable is stressed ( perMIT, perFUME, conTENT ) the word is a verb.
choose a word like "rejects"....it rhymes well because it has two syllable and has exactly the same last syllable.
No, it is a two syllable word: stead-y
No, the word "wolf" only has one syllable.
No. The word 'their' has one syllable.
No, a rhyme is when the ending sounds of two or more words are identical or very similar. This can occur in different parts of the word, not just the last syllable.
There is only one syllable in stressed. The -ed may make it sound like two, but it isn't.
A two syllable word that rhymes with 'what' is whatnot.