Using the word as a noun the stress is on the first syllable. Using the word as a verb the stress is on the second syllable.
The teacher gave the student permission to leave the room.
permit
The stress on the word curious is CURious.
Stress the first syllable: HALLway
Main stress on the ti (second syllable )
The teacher gave the student permission to leave the room.
permit
The word "permit" can be a noun (My permit is posted on the wall.) or a verb (I cannot permit you to cut up my drivers' license.)
Permit"certify", "license" and "permit"
permit
The Luhya word for the English word 'stress' is "nyasia".
Briefly: In English, the stress normally "tries" to be as far from the end of the word as possible, up to four syllables away. Thus the well-spoken say EVidently, FORmidable, EXquisite, and not eviDENTly, forMIDable or exQUISite. However, compound prepositions, such as atop, uphill, about, before and so forth take the stress on the second element. Likewise, preposition-compound verbs such as become, forget, foresee, assume, deny and so forth take the stress on the second, verbal element. It is fashionable, and not wrong, exactly, merely inelegant, to stress the penult, or next-to-last syllable in certain foreign borrowed words, such as incognito, charisma. Where a word may be a noun or a verb, such as perfume, permit, content and so forth, the noun takes the stress on the first syllable: PERfume, PERmit, CONtent. The verb takes the stress on the second syllable: perFUME, perMIT, conTENT. There are numerous exceptions.
The stress on the word several is on several.
The stress in the word "interpret" is on the "ter".
you stress
The stress in "kindness" is on the first syllable.
The abstract noun form of the verb permit is permission.The word 'permit' is also a noun, a concrete noun, a word for a document granting authorization, a license; a word for a thing.