pre
The stress in a prefix used as a noun typically falls on the first syllable.
In English, there are no fixed rules for determining which syllable is stressed; it often varies between different words. In languages that use accent marks (e.g. Spanish), the mark is typically placed above the stressed vowel to indicate emphasis on that syllable.
trochee
The word stressed has only one syllable. If you wanted to use the word in a poem you could take poetic license and pronounce it with two syllables as stress-ed.
Both. The "re" is a prefix that means "again," and the "tion" is a suffix which turns the verb "distribute" into a noun.
That would be three stressed syllables, a molossus.
I do not know of a specific name for a word's stressed syllable. However, sometimes people use the phrase "accented syllable" instead of "stressed syllable."
Iambic. An iamb, or iambus, consists of an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed one. A trochee consists of a stressed syllable followed by an unstressed one. Take your pick!
trochee
Use a capital letter to indicate the stressed syllable of contractor
trochee
In the words themselves, you don't. In Latin pronunciation keys, you use apostrophes (sort of) before the syllable. In the most stressed syllable, you use one above, in a less-stressed syllable, you use one lower like a comma.E.g. "pronunciation": prǝ,nǝnsē'ā sh ǝn
trochee
Belief is stressed on the second syllable.
The term is "iamb." It is a metrical foot in poetry consisting of one unstressed syllable followed by one stressed syllable, such as in the word "begin."
Although stressing the third syllable is a bit unorthodox, here goes:Beautiful scenery is a common feature of the Caribbean.
A syllable that comes before a root word to change its meaning. (:
In English, there are no fixed rules for determining which syllable is stressed; it often varies between different words. In languages that use accent marks (e.g. Spanish), the mark is typically placed above the stressed vowel to indicate emphasis on that syllable.