The word "puke", in the sense of "to spit up in a single instance of regurgitation" was coined by Shakespeare in 1600 in the play As You Like It.
cobblerpuke
The word plant has one syllable. This means that there is no syllable divide for this word.
no it is a syllable word
Photo is an open syllable word.
No, but it is a 3 syllable word
The word talked has one syllable.
shakespeare
no he didnt
Yes. Shakespeare invented the word academe. Do a littlie research when it was first used. Good luck, nugget x
He used it a lot, but it was already a well-established word before he used it.
No. Christopher Marlowe did, although Shakespeare used it three times in his early plays and poems. Marlowe was very fond of this word and used it 17 times.
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"
he has vomit
The word bruised only has one syllable. This means the whole word is the syllable and so there are no syllable breaks.
The syllable break in the word "page" is between the 'p' and 'a' – pag-e.
No. The word 'their' has one syllable.
first syllable
"But soft" is an example of iambic meter, with the stress falling on the second syllable of each word ("soft" is stressed, "but" is unstressed). This is a common metrical pattern in Shakespeare's poetry, where each foot consists of an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable.