The whole word is one big syllable. There are no syllable breaks.
The word block only has one syllable.
The word "mint" has a closed syllable. A closed syllable occurs when a vowel is followed by one or more consonants, which is the case here with the short vowel "i" followed by the consonant "nt." Therefore, since the vowel is closed off by the consonants, "mint" is classified as a closed syllable.
"Escape" is an example of an open syllable. In this word, the first syllable "es" ends with a vowel sound and is not followed by a consonant, allowing it to be classified as open. The second syllable, "cape," also ends with a vowel sound, but the entire word features both types of syllables.
The word make has one syllable.
The first.
A closed syllable. An open syllable. A vowel-consonant-e syllable. A vowel team syllable. A consonant-le syllable. An r-controlled syllable.
The stressed syllable in the word "morning" is the first syllable, which is "mor."
The accented syllable in "wanders" is the first syllable, "wan."
The accented syllable in the word "fierceness" is the first syllable, "fierce."
The stressed syllable in the word "belief" is the first syllable, "be."
The second syllable of unique is a stressed syllable.
there are three in the word syllable
First syllable.
The stressed syllable in "believe" is the second syllable - "lieve."
The stressed syllable in "divert" is the first syllable "di-."
A weak syllable is unstressed. A strong syllable carries the stress.
The stressed syllable in "necessary" is the first syllable "nec."