The first syllable is stressed. The second is unstressed.
Take and word are stressed, the rest unstressed.
A trochee is a word containing two syllables, the first stressed and the second unstressed (such as FORest). "Beautiful" has three syllables in the stressed-unstressed-unstressed pattern (BEAUtiful), which makes it a dactyl.
If the stressed and unstressed syllables are written, the stressed looks like ` and the unstressed looks like a u. They are the ones emphasized in a word and can be found in a dictionary in capitals. DI-et con-SUME LEAP-ing You can put extra emphasis on each syllable of a word and decide which one sounds normal. SU-perb is wrong and sounds wrong su-PERB is right and sounds like the regular word
The word vacation has two open syllables. (va-ca-tion)
stressedAnother answer:An iamb is not a syllable. It is a metrical unit comprising two syllables. The first is short or unstressed, and the second is long or stressed. The word 'because' is an example of an iamb.
Take and word are stressed, the rest unstressed.
A trochee is a word containing two syllables, the first stressed and the second unstressed (such as FORest). "Beautiful" has three syllables in the stressed-unstressed-unstressed pattern (BEAUtiful), which makes it a dactyl.
The stressed syllable in desperate is the first one, 'des.' The other two are not stressed.
If the stressed and unstressed syllables are written, the stressed looks like ` and the unstressed looks like a u. They are the ones emphasized in a word and can be found in a dictionary in capitals. DI-et con-SUME LEAP-ing You can put extra emphasis on each syllable of a word and decide which one sounds normal. SU-perb is wrong and sounds wrong su-PERB is right and sounds like the regular word
The word vacation has two open syllables. (va-ca-tion)
stressedAnother answer:An iamb is not a syllable. It is a metrical unit comprising two syllables. The first is short or unstressed, and the second is long or stressed. The word 'because' is an example of an iamb.
A syllable is only stressed in comparison to another syllable in the same word, therefore, only a word with at least two syllables would have either a stressed or an unstressed syllable, hence no, dry is not stressed.
The word together has three syllables. Two of the syllables are unstressed. The syllables in the word are to-ge'-ther.
An iamb is a word or line consisting of two syllables, one unstressed followed by a stressed syllable. "Telephone" has three syllables, therefore is not an iamb.
Stressed syllables are those syllables that are emphasized in speech. This can be done in several ways, such as 1) increased volume, 2) (in English) elongated vowel(s), and 3) "pure" pronunciation of the vowel(s).Unstressed syllables can be quieter, shorter, and often are pronounced as ə, the symbol "schwa," representing the "uh" sound you hear in "photography." "tog" is the stressed syllable, and if you say the word out loud, you'll hear that it's a little longer and louder than the other syllables. The unstressed syllables in the word "pho" and "graph" are both pronounced like "uh," which will never happen in a stressed syllable--if they were stressed, you'd have "foh-tah-graaf-ee" instead of "fuh-tah-gruhf-ee."
No, heartbreak is not an example of an iamb. An iamb is a metrical foot consisting of one unstressed syllable followed by one stressed syllable, like in the word "believe." Heartbreak does not follow this pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables.
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