In the word "travel," the unstressed syllable is "trav." The syllable "vel" is the stressed part, while "trav" is pronounced more softly and quickly. This stress pattern is typical in many two-syllable words in English.
No, "travel" is not an unstressed syllable; it is a two-syllable word with the stress on the first syllable: "TRAv-el." The first syllable is stressed, while the second syllable is unstressed. Thus, "travel" contains both stressed and unstressed syllables.
The word is pronounced TRAV-el, not tra-VEL. The unstressed syllable is the second one.
vel
In the word "silver," the unstressed syllable is "ver." The emphasis is on the first syllable, "sil-" while the second syllable "ver" is unstressed.
The unstressed syllable is "im".
The second syllable is unstressed.
/avel/
its the "i" that's unstressed
The unstressed syllable is -chan- MER-chan-Dise
The first syllable is unstressed in the word "achieve."
The syllable structure is pan-ic. The unstressed syllable is the second syllable, or "ic"
The unstressed syllable in "despair" is the second syllable, "pair." The emphasis is on the first syllable, "de."