It refers to <u>the stressed syllable in a structure</u>. You should also consider that:
- a syllable is a pronunciation unit having one vowel sound. For example: dog, blue.
-the stress is the emphasis you give to a syllable (making it longer and louder). For example in the word “banana” the second syllable is stressed.
In the following structures, you can see the accented syllable in bold and underlined:
-intonation is another aspect you should consider when stress is applied not only in isolated words but in a whole structure: it is the rising or falling sound of the voice when speaking.
Here you have more examples: (the underlined part is the stressed one)
-I´m Japa<u>nese</u>.
-Are you <u>lon</u>ely in your <u>house</u>?
-I en<u>joy dan</u>cing!
The answer is C: It asks the reader a question.
A thesis statement is a concise phrase, usually one sentence, that lets the reader know how the writer will interpret the subject matter being discussed.
It creates a map or itinerary, so to speak, that the writer will follow throughout the text in supporting his or her claim. This claim is meant to be either disputed or conceded by the reader. The thesis statement, as such, does not ask anything particular to or of the reader.
Answer:18 or 19
Explanation: that's just when the law tells you that you are an adult
Answer:
i think it's guilt and ambition but idek
Explanation:
gl lol :)
1. chancellor 2. chanting 3. chiruping 4. 5 chooler