The word kind has one syllable.
In the word "kind," there is only one syllable.
Closed
They were "really" kind. They were "so" kind. Therefore, in this case, "so" is a one syllable word that can be used instead of "really".
An iambic foot has an unaccented syllable followed by an accented one.
one syllable
Voyage in English has the stress on the first syllable; in French it should be pronounced with the stress on the final syllable. Kind of think of it like this: When you see voyage, does your voice go up of down on the second syllable? It goes down. So it has the stress on the first syllable. I hope I helped!
Oklahoma.
Examples of one-syllable adjectives are:allbluecolddryeastfairgrandhotilljustkeylonemoreniceonepoorrawsafetruevilewholeyoung
There are many such English words. Affect, content, detail, perfume, permit etc, are nouns when accented on the first, and verbs when accented on the second syllable. If there is name for this kind of word, I do not know it.
A closed syllable. An open syllable. A vowel-consonant-e syllable. A vowel team syllable. A consonant-le syllable. An r-controlled syllable.
Only one in the last syllable, unless you have some kind of a southwest accent.