The stress is in the second syllable ... in-TEND
intend
The stress on the word curious is CURious.
gu
The syllables are en-thu-si-as-tic. The primary emphasis rests on "thu" and the secondary stress on "as."
I intend tomorrow to tell her I love her.
The stress is on the first syllable, GOV. The US pronunciation is "GUV-urn-ment". (the N sound is frequently lost, as compared to its sound in "governing")
The stress on the word curious is CURious.
gu
I intend to show you the meaning of the word "intend".
The syllables are en-thu-si-as-tic. The primary emphasis rests on "thu" and the secondary stress on "as."
The three voice qualities are: stress, pitch, and juncture. Stress is vocal emphasis on a spoken word or part of a word, pitch is stress produced by the rise and fall of the voice, and juncture is a pause between sounds or words.
I intend to answer this question to the best of my ability.
I intend tomorrow to tell her I love her.
The stress is on the first syllable, GOV. The US pronunciation is "GUV-urn-ment". (the N sound is frequently lost, as compared to its sound in "governing")
stress
The pronunciation of the word poison stresses the first syllable. So POIson would have the first syllable slightly louder and higher pitched.
The Luhya word for the English word 'stress' is "nyasia".
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.