the first syllable i.e. pronounce grass-land
Trochaic tetrameter is a poetic meter consisting of four trochees per line, where a trochee is a foot made up of a stressed syllable followed by an unstressed syllable. An example of trochaic tetrameter can be found in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's poem "The Song of Hiawatha," which often adheres to this rhythmic pattern. For instance, the line "By the shores of Gitche Gumee" illustrates this meter with its alternating stressed and unstressed syllables.
An example of meter in poetry is iambic pentameter, which consists of lines with five feet, each foot containing an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable. Shakespeare's plays and sonnets often use this metrical pattern.
grass is a producer in a grassland
Yes. There can be grassland anywhere.
let's go to a grassland to walk
the first syllable i.e. pronounce grass-land
Footprint is stressed on the first syllable.
Captive is stressed on the first syllable.
The first syllable is stressed.
Lightning is stressed on the first syllable.
In the word "lawyer," the first syllable "law" is stressed.
It is not entirely clear whether you are asking which syllable is stressed or what the first syllable is. The stressed syllable is the first syllable: sev.
Saunter is stressed on the first syllable.
District is stressed on the first syllable.
The stressed syllable in "injure" is the first syllable "in-".
Accurate is stressed on the first syllable.
Personal is stressed on the first syllable.