There isn't a final syllable in the word called. The word called is only one syllable. The -ed may make it sound like another syllable but it isn't.
It has two (the final -e is silent). It's pronounced with the accent on the first syllable. SY'kl.
there are three in the word syllable
Long syllable.
no word it isn't possible because if you take away one syllable from a five syllable word you get a four syllable word and there is no such thing as a "no syllable word"
A final consonant syllable is a syllable that ends with a consonant sound. For example, in the word "cat," the final syllable is "at" and it ends with the consonant sound /t/.
/k/
There isn't a final syllable in the word called. The word called is only one syllable. The -ed may make it sound like another syllable but it isn't.
stle
The accent goes on the first syllable: CHANN (rhymes with pan or can) 'l (the final syllable has an almost silent e). CHANN'l
Destroy is stressed on the second (final) syllable.
Yes, "region" is an open syllable because the final syllable ends in a vowel sound.
Yes, the word "April" has an open syllable because the final syllable ends with a vowel sound "il."
Climax has a closed syllable structure. The final "x" creates a closed syllable with the short "i" sound and the "k" sound being consecutive consonants.
No. The final syllable of Australia sounds like a short "ya," and the stress falls on a different syllable to boot.
Sincere is stressed on the second syllable. A simple way of testing which syllable is stressed is by saying the word aloud. Look for the syllable that you naturally emphasise more in your speech.
If you mean "automobile," it is usually stressed on the first syllable, but in verse it may be stresses on the final syllable. If you mean, as you wrote, "auto" and "mobile," both words receive the stress on the first syllable.