Any with four syllables.
It stays the same
Yes, the frequency is higher - same as if the moving source was towards a stationary person -it is all relative
yes
-- Take two snapshots of it, at two different times. -- If it's in different places in the two photos, it's definitely not stationary. -- If it's in the same place in both photos, then it may or may not be stationary. It could be returning periodically to the same place, and you just happened to catch it on two occasions when it was in the same place. So if the photos are identical, you must ... -- Take two more snapshots, at two different times, spaced by a different length of time from the first pair of photos. -- If the object's position is the same in both of the second set of photos, then it's truly stationary.
the frequencies are same.
No.
A simple way of determining the syllables of a word is to say the word aloud and clap at the same time. The number of claps you make corresponds to the number of syllables. The word airplane has two syllables. Air-plane.
Yes, they are consonant. They have the same number of syllables and the stress is the same and they end in the same sounds.
I went to the supermarket. I bought some apples and some pears. Both of these sentences have eight syllables.
Austin and Boston
Austin, Boston
When the merry-go-round came off of it's axle, it was no longer stationary. Geosynchronous orbit is the same as stationary orbit. A revolving stage is not supposed to be stationary!
Stationary mean "not moving" so it must mean the the position is not moving or stay the same place.
Yes it does. It is not an exact rhyme - it is what is called an assonance. An assonance generally has the same number of syllables as the original word, and the main sound is the same.
Yes. You hear the band playing in the same key no matter where your seat is in the audience.
Some words that rhyme with "lectures" are textures, conjectures, and ruptures.
The number of breathes (or stops) it takes to say a word, or the number of vowel sounds in a word are both good indications of how many syllables are in a word.For example:The word "divided" di-vi-ded is three syllables. (3 vowels, 3 vowel sounds, 3 syllables.) but the word "divide" di-vide is two syllables (3 vowels, 2 vowel sounds, 2 syllables.)It is important to remember that just because a word has a certain number of vowels does not mean that it also has the same number of syllables.The name "Juan" has two vowels, but they create one sound, so the name is one syllable long.