The stress syllable in the word "calculator" falls on the second syllable, pronounced as "cal-cu-LA-tor." In linguistic terms, this is known as penultimate stress, where the second-to-last syllable is emphasized. This stress pattern is common in English words with four or more syllables, following the general rule that longer words tend to have stress on earlier syllables.
no, its a four syllable word cal-cu-la-tion
The stress is on the second syllable, 'mer'
The second.
the first
No, you do not divide a one-syllable word. The word is pronounced with a single stress point.
The stress syllable in the word "photographic" is on the third syllable, which is "-to-".
The stress syllable in the word "butterfly" is on the first syllable, "but".
The stress syllable in the word "paragraph" is the first syllable, "par."
The stress is on the first syllable in the word "superb."
The stress syllable in the word "infamous" is the second syllable, "fa."
The stress syllable in the word "afternoon" falls on the first syllable, "af-".
The syllable stress in the word "receive" is on the second syllable - re-CEIVE.
Forefathers is stressed on the first syllable.
first syllable - grass
No, "service" is not a first syllable stress word. The stress falls on the second syllable in "service."
The stress syllable in the word "organization" is "ni-".
Using the word as a noun the stress is on the first syllable. Using the word as a verb the stress is on the second syllable.