The accent in the name "Pierre" is placed on the "e," making it pronounced as "pyair." The accent indicates that the vowel is pronounced distinctly, similar to the English word "pear."
It doesn't have an accent mark, but the stress is placed on the first "e".
The accent in the word "bibliothèque" is called an acute accent. It is placed over the letter e to indicate that it should be pronounced as an 'ay' sound.
Stressing the word out.
The accent in the word "grimace" is placed on the second syllable, so it is pronounced "gri-MACE."
When saying the word 'adventure' the accent is placed on the second syllable. Another word that has the same syllabic pattern would be 'indenture.'
the accent is on the first "e" = née When there is a double "e" in a French word, the accent is always on the first one and never on the second.
Where would the accent on conflict be placed in the sentence there was a huge conflict between two candidates
The accent placed over a vowel is called an accent mark or diacritic. It indicates a specific pronunciation or stress on that vowel within a word. Different languages use accent marks in various ways to modify the sound of vowels.
The word "adventure" does not have an accent mark. It is spelled without any diacritical marks in standard English. If you are asking about a specific language or context where the word might have an accent, please provide more details.
The two variant pronunciations of the word increase are [in-KREES] (/ɪnˈkris/ in IPA) or [IN-krees] (/ˈɪnkris/ in IPA), which means you can accent either syllable in the word increase.
Yes, the name Pierre is often written with an accent grave in French to indicate the pronunciation of the last syllable.
Above is a second accent syllable.