There are very many word with two syllables but here are some:
Hiking
Follow
Sorrow
Delay
Pursue
Arcade
Dampen
Lister
Power
Apple
Mental
Foresee
Bouncing
Stomach
Business
Forlorn
Attack
Barrel
Cupboard
Allow
Porous
Bigger
Little
Minute
Yearly
Plated
Defeat
Ghostly
Teacher
Iris
Finger
Some choices: cabbage, rubble, bubble, babble, wobble, clobber, pebble, stubble, gibbon, fibber
Who the frak knows stop wasting your fraking time and get a life.
Feedback and goodness.
Artwork, Aardvark, and some others.
Some one syllable words beginning with 'B' are:bebadbagbanbarbatbaybedbegbetbibbidbigbinbitbobboabogboobopbowboybudbuybugbumbunbusbutbeadbeakbookbestbustbrimbragblueblabburybeetbeatbeerbearbossballbillbellbirdbull
Two-syllable words: The B words bicycle, binary, and goodbye all have long i sounds (the Y in goodbye). The words biased, science, fiery, eyeball, and buyer all have long i sounds created by vowel pairs.
how many years of school are needed for each vocational/technicaltraining
There are no two-letter English words that end with B.
abbreviatebabblebubbleblubbercabbagecribbagechubbycrabbydabbledribbleebbflabbygabbygibbetgibberishgobblehobblejabberlobbynibblepebblequibblerabbitrubbishrubblestubbletabbedtabbytubbywobble
An iamb is a word with one syllable not accented followed by a syllable that is accented . Out of these choices, Joanne would be an iamb.
yes. ANSWER Yes, it is silent. You pronounce it "dett",one syllable. P.S. You DO pronounce the "b" in debit, two syllables, accent on first syllable.... as in "my checking account is overdrawn because I used my debit card and didn't write it down..."
In a poem, anapest and iambs are two different types of metrical feet used to describe the pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables within the lines. An anapest consists of two unstressed syllables followed by a stressed syllable, while an iamb consists of one unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable. These terms help to analyze the rhythm and meter of a poem.
1st syllable: bar, as in a place that serves drinks 2nd syllable: b, as in the letter B 3rd syllable: cue, as in either the letter Q or, "Thats my cue" Hope that helped
Use the following function: /* returns the average of two real numbers */ double average (const double a, const double b) { return a/2.0 + b/2.0; } Note that we do not use (a+b) / 2.0 because the expression a+b could overflow the range of a double. By dividing each value by 2 before summing we ensure the result can never overflow no matter how large a and b are. Ideally, you should write separate functions to cater for float and long double arguments independently: /* returns the average of two long doubles */ long double average_lng (const long double a, const long double b) { return a/2.0 + b/2.0; } /* returns the average of two floats */ float average_flt (const float a, const float b) { return a/2.0F + b/2.0F; } For mixed-mode arithmetic, always use the highest precision argument. E.g., the average of a float and a double is a double, so use the function that returns a double, not a float. The float argument will be implicitly cast to a double.
The first syllable of the word abscess (ab) should be accented.
blue bird,