"Syllable" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
The word "syllable" refers to a unit of sound in a word that contains a vowel sound. It is a unit of phonology that is used to measure the rhythm, stress, and pronunciation of words. A syllable usually consists of a consonant sound followed by a vowel sound.
To split words into syllables.<br><br>Example: <br><br> Sylla-bi-fy <br><br>The transformation of a word or phrase into its syllables for the sake of teaching or writing is an example of syllabification.
The verb "syllabise" (or "syllabize" in American English) means to pronounce or divide a word into its syllables, especially the pronunciation of a word according to syllabic criteria.<br><br>Example: "The teacher syllabised the word 'communication' for the students, breaking it into syllables for easier pronunciation: com-mu-ni-ca-tion."
A word or a unit of language is composed of syllables, which is a unit of sound in a word that contains a vowel sound. A syllable usually has one vowel sound. They are the building blocks of words in a language.
A document that outlines the planned teaching content and learning activities for a course, including courses, lectures, assignments, and assessment criteria. Normally, syllabus is provided by teacher to student in the first week of a course to guide individual learning.
Syllepsis is a rhetorical device in which a word’s invariable inherent meaning is preserved while its extension or relation to a second word changes, or more specifically, in which a word that belongs to one of two conceived relations, such as a verb and its object or a noun and its qualifying modifier, is used for both, the extension being changed but the relation remaining the same.