word stress उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- The teacher uses this chart to help teach pronunciation; as well as pointing to colors to help students with the different sounds, she can also tap particular colors very hard to help students learn word stress.
- From the perceptual point of view, stress functions as the means of making a syllable prominent; stress may be studied in relation to individual words ( named " word stress " or prosodic stress " ).
- In the following table, an acute accent ( ?) marks the syllable carrying the word stress; a macron ( ?) marks long vowels and the syllable in "'bold "'is the one illustrating the different vowel gradations.
- In poetry, however, word order was often changed for the sake of the meter for which vowel quantity ( short vowels vs . long vowels and diphthongs ) and consonant clusters, not rhyme and word stress, governed the patterns.
- Helen Richer of Laguna Hills, Calif ., who took her 15-year-old grandson, Ian Richer, to Japan in 1991 on a conventional escorted tour, did not use the word stress, but said, " You take on a huge responsibility ."
- Shanghainese has also come to have word stress in recent times ( the first syllable's tone spreads over the multisyllable word and the subsequent syllables'tones are disregarded ) but Mandarin and Cantonese do not, sticking with the syllable ( = character in writing ) as the unit.
- For the album, band frontman Rivers Cuomo explored new songwriting techniques, such as using a cut-up technique, adding potential lyrics to a spreadsheet and including them on songs, such as " Summer Elaine and Drunk Dori " and " L . A . Girlz ", based on their syllable count and word stress.
- It contains a number of features not found elsewhere in Poland, e . g . nine distinct oral vowels ( vs . the five of standard Polish ) and ( in the northern dialects ) phonemic word stress, an archaic feature preserved from Common Slavic times and not found anywhere else among the West Slavic languages.
- Kashubian contains a number of features not found in Polish dialects, e . g . nine distinct oral vowels ( vs . the five of standard Polish ) and ( in the northern dialects ) phonemic word stress, an archaic feature preserved from Common Slavic times and not found anywhere else among the West Slavic languages.