The primary stress in the word "condolence" falls on the first syllable, specifically on the vowel "o". So, it is pronounced as CON-dolence.
The vowel with primary stress in the word "bamboo" is the second "a" sound.
The vowel with primary stress in the word "ceremony" is the first "e" - /ˈsɛrəˌmoʊni/.
if it`s a noun or adjective the primary stress will be on the penult( the syllable before the final ) if the vowel is heavy( branching - short vowel+ coda OR diphthong) if it`s not heavy then go to the next left heavy syllable if it`s a verb then the stress will be on the ult (the final syllable ) if it`s heavy secondary stress : a full vowel will have secondary stress unless :it`s in the final syllable
A mark above a vowel is called a diacritic or accent. It can change the pronunciation, stress or tone of the vowel.
No, "lagoon" doesn't have a stressed vowel. The stress in "lagoon" falls on the first syllable, "la."
o
No, the word condolences is actually stressed on the *second* syllable. Condolences.
The vowel with primary stress in the word "bamboo" is the second "a" sound.
The vowel with primary stress in the word "ceremony" is the first "e" - /ˈsɛrəˌmoʊni/.
equal stress
I
bamboo
A
The second A (second to last syllable is "zay").
By pronouncing the word, then check if the word has a sound that its vowel doesn't make
if it`s a noun or adjective the primary stress will be on the penult( the syllable before the final ) if the vowel is heavy( branching - short vowel+ coda OR diphthong) if it`s not heavy then go to the next left heavy syllable if it`s a verb then the stress will be on the ult (the final syllable ) if it`s heavy secondary stress : a full vowel will have secondary stress unless :it`s in the final syllable
In the word "effort," the stress falls on the first syllable, which is "ef." This means that the vowel sound in the stressed syllable, the "e" in this case, is the stress vowel. In phonetics, this is often represented with a stress mark (ˈ) before the stressed syllable: /ˈɛf.ərt/.