It’s Friday, we’re all tired after a long week, so let’s have a look at an old post that answers two questions:
Can a word have more than one stressed syllable?
Can a word have no stressed syllables?
This post is inspired by two common and related questions I often see posed online:
- Can an English word have two equally-stressed syllables?
- Can an English word have no stressed syllables?
Before answering (and mercifully, the answer to both questions is the same, and quite simple), let’s have a look at what word stress actually is.
View original post 1,241 more words
[…] for you. Isle of Dogs sounds identical to I love dogs. Well, practically identical. The sentence stress is slightly different between the two, with the emphasis on Isle in the former, and love in the […]
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[…] schwa is so common because it’s such a short, unstressed sound that’s very useful for joining consonants together. In addition to representing this […]
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[…] you notice a difference between those two? It’s all in how they sound, specifically, which syllable we stress. Contract the noun, has the stress on the first syllable. When we use it as a verb though, the […]
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[…] phrase becoming popular is that it sounds good. And work colleague does have a ring to it, with its stressed/unstressed/stressed syllable rhythm. Because it doesn’t sound strange, people don’t […]
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[…] between British and American English. I pronounce it the standard British/Irish way: /gærəʤ/ (emphasis on the first syllable). In American English though, it’s pronounced more like /gərɑ:ʒ/ […]
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[…] it interesting by the way, how we pronounce Oldman? Imagine if we emphasised the second syllable, therefore pronouncing it like, well, old man. It’d be weird, […]
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[…] the pronunciation themselves. I’d always assumed the O had the same sound as Oh!, and the stressed syllable was the I (oh-ca-reen-a, […]
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