You can say someone is stressed when they are experiencing feelings of overwhelm, frustration, anxiety, or tension that is affecting their overall well-being and functionality. Symptoms can include physical, emotional, and behavioral changes such as headaches, irritability, difficulty concentrating, or changes in eating or sleeping patterns.
The first syllable "har" is stressed in the word "harassment."
Whether or not when is stressed depends on how it is used. If you say, "When will He get here?" You would stress the When and the He. If you said, "When We meet again, we will..." You would emphasize the We and the Again. You would say the When softly.
The second syllable is stressed, my fifth-grade teacher didn't say so. I did.
The first syllable "out" in outrun should be stressed when you say it.
Stress, same word. - to be stressed -> être stressé
To move faster than someone or something
They might not have enough sleep
Chill !
row-DY the second syllable is stressed the louder you say each part its stressed the louder it is
The first syllable "har" is stressed in the word "harassment."
id say try to calm down
The first syllable is stressed, my fifth-grade teacher didn't say so. I did
Whether or not when is stressed depends on how it is used. If you say, "When will He get here?" You would stress the When and the He. If you said, "When We meet again, we will..." You would emphasize the We and the Again. You would say the When softly.
The first syllable is stressed. My fifth-grade teacher didn't say so. I said so.
I think it depends on how you say it.
You fluster somebody by making them extremely worried and stressed out.
The second syllable is stressed, my fifth-grade teacher didn't say so. I did.