True, Classifying syllable classes in multisyllabic words should be considered a scaffolding activity, not a goal in itself.
<h3>What comes first encoding or decoding?</h3>
In order to read, you need to solve (sound out) words. In order to spell, you need to encode words. In other words, pull the sounds apart within a word and match notes to the sounds. Encoding and decoding connect the components of auditory and visual processing
<h3>What are examples of multisyllabic words?</h3>
Multisyllabic Words
Syllables. baby. bacon. balloon. baseball. bedroom. bedtime. berry.
Syllables. basketball. bicycle. blueberry. broccoli. neighborhood. library. umbrella.
To learn more about Syllable, refer
brainly.com/question/1514007
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Just so you know...
A simile is comparing something with something else using 'like' or 'as' (for example - I swam in the sea like a fish or my room is like a tip).
A metaphor is a word or phrase that compares something with something else (for example - his heart is metal or my room is a tip). Hope this makes sense!
1. The road was as curvy as a snake - Simile
2. My mum told me that my room is like a pigsty - Simile
3. Mike is like a scared kitten as he enters the haunted house - Simile
Hope I helped!
An appositive is a noun or noun phrase that renames another noun right beside it, it can be short or long combination of words here's an example: The insect, a cockroach, is crawling across the kitchen table. i hope this helps you :)
A paradox is a literary device that uses two opposing thoughts which may appear senseless, but turns out that it contains a kind of truth in it. A consonance is also a literary device by the repetition of consonant sounds within sentences, phrases or poems. From the given question above, the line that contains both paradox and consonance is option D: At least to know the worst is sweet.