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Ambassador has four syllables. The syllables are am-bas-sa-dor.
It has been re-used in many languages the origin is unknown.French: ambassadeurItalian: ambasciatoreLatin: ambasciator, ambassiator, ambasator
The stress mark in the word "ambassador" is placed on the second syllable, so it is pronounced as am-BASS-a-dor.
The word "syllable" developed from Latin "syllaba" which in turn came from Greek "sullabe" combining "sun" (together) and "labein" (to take). So, it was influenced by at least two languages.
Ako nga nagtatanong tapos tatanungin niyo ako... hahaha...
My mother is an ambassador
Ambassador has four syllables. The syllables are am-bas-sa-dor.
It has been re-used in many languages the origin is unknown.French: ambassadeurItalian: ambasciatoreLatin: ambasciator, ambassiator, ambasator
No. The word "ambassador" does not specify a gender.
The origin of a word indicates the language the word originally came from, or the languages certain parts (such as prefixes and suffixes) come from.
The stress mark in the word "ambassador" is placed on the second syllable, so it is pronounced as am-BASS-a-dor.
"Ambassador" has four syllables (am-bass-a-dor)
This is latin word :)
The correct way to write "the ambassador" is without spaces and with the word "the" preceding "ambassador" to indicate a specific individual holding the title of ambassador.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The noun 'ambassador' is a common gender noun, a word for a male or a female.
The word "syllable" developed from Latin "syllaba" which in turn came from Greek "sullabe" combining "sun" (together) and "labein" (to take). So, it was influenced by at least two languages.
Ako nga nagtatanong tapos tatanungin niyo ako... hahaha...