The word "syllable" is spelled as s-y-l-l-a-b-l-e.
The accent is in the third syllable. It follows the 'l'. This means that the 'l' is emphasized when spoken.
tan-gi-ble the answer is ble
l] ;'pl,.,;.';l,; ',mpo] lk[pl.ll;';/
The word "leaves" has one syllable. A syllable is a unit of pronunciation typically containing a vowel sound and sometimes surrounding consonants. In the case of "leaves," the single syllable is formed by the vowel sound "ee" and the surrounding consonants "l" and "v."
The word tickle is pronunced /TIK-uhl/ (/ˈtɪkəl/ in IPA), a first-syllable stress.
The word "pulled" is considered to have one syllable because the "ll" in the middle is a digraph, which represents a single sound /l/. Despite the double letters, it is pronounced as one unit within the word.
I would say just ONE syllable. As -ed folows an L it is pronounced as a D. Hurled rhymes with world and is a single syllable word. Howard Boss
The accent goes on the first syllable: CHANN (rhymes with pan or can) 'l (the final syllable has an almost silent e). CHANN'l
liquor, lacquer
No. The L sound at the end has a schwa sound (uhl).
'Layed' has one syllable in common English. It, by conventional orthography would be pronounced the same as "Laid". However, since "layed" is not a word, there is nobody to defend it. With that in mind, it could have as many as four syllables if you allow the L to be a semivowel.