Stress on the first three letters only - Pul
The third syllable
the third syllable
In the word colleague the first syllable receives the stress.
in-for-MA-tion. The primary stress is on the third syllable; there is a secondary stress on the first syllable.
The stressed syllable is the syllable that is emphasized when it is spoken. Some words have more than one stressed syllable, so the primary stress is the most emphasized syllable, the secondary stress is the second most emphasized, and the tertiary stress is the third most emphasized.
I assume it has to do with syllable stress. Primary stress on a word receives the loudest, most energy. For example, the syllable exAMple is primary in American English. Secondary stress is the one with slightly less energy, while tertiary is almost glossed over. So in PROBLEMATIC, the /ic/ is tertiary, while /PROB/ is primary and /MAT/ is secondary (in my English at least.
FLOR-id
The first syllable "for" in the word "forgot" receives greater stress.
The first syllable in the word 'medicine' is the one that receives stress (med'i'cine).
The syllable in the word "disposable" that receives the most stress is the second syllable, "pos."
The first syllable in "fortification" has the secondary stress; the fourth syllable ("ca") has the primary stress.aldo DelaraDelara
In the word colleague the first syllable receives the stress.
Secondary stress refers to the second syllable in a word that has less emphasis than the first. The second syllable must have an accent mark in order to be considered a secondary stress.
the first.
in-for-MA-tion. The primary stress is on the third syllable; there is a secondary stress on the first syllable.
The stressed syllable is the syllable that is emphasized when it is spoken. Some words have more than one stressed syllable, so the primary stress is the most emphasized syllable, the secondary stress is the second most emphasized, and the tertiary stress is the third most emphasized.
The stress syllable in the word "diarrhoea" is on the second syllable, "rhe." It is pronounced as "dir-ee-REE-uh."
"Underground" is a compound word with secondary stress on the second syllable ("ground").
I assume it has to do with syllable stress. Primary stress on a word receives the loudest, most energy. For example, the syllable exAMple is primary in American English. Secondary stress is the one with slightly less energy, while tertiary is almost glossed over. So in PROBLEMATIC, the /ic/ is tertiary, while /PROB/ is primary and /MAT/ is secondary (in my English at least.