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Hela Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

segmentation of syllables

Dear teachers,

Is there a rule which explains how one should segment syllables?

For example I thought that "lateral, easily, reliability, laboratory" were divided this way :

la/te/ral
ea/si/ly
re/li/a/bi/li/ty
la/bo/ra/to/ry

but they seem to be segmented this way, why?
lat/er/al
eas/i/ly
re/li/a/bil/i/ty
lab/o/ra/to/ry
Have you got other tricky exemples, please?

How would you devide the follwing:

"a ttri bu te" or "at tri bu te" ? "a ffect" oru "af fect" ? "a pplause" or "ap plause" ?
"a ppeal" or "ap peal" ? etc.

Thank you very much for your help.

Hela
  

Top answer

0Every dictionary shows you how words are divided up into syllables. 02br 02br 00The rule is to follow the dictionary. 05000 The dictionary divides them based on proper pronunciation.

  • 0Every dictionary shows you how words are divided up into syllables.
  • 02br 02br 00The rule is to follow the dictionary.
  • 05000 The dictionary divides them based on proper pronunciation.
  • I really don't know how to explain; it's just something that I know just because I know it.
  • For example, with lateral, your way is wrong because people don't say it that way.
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1 Answers
0
0Every dictionary shows you how words are divided up into syllables. That is your one-stop place for all syllable questions.02br
02br
00The rule is to follow the dictionary. 05000 The dictionary divides them based on proper pronunciation. I guess you'd have to be a native speaker to understand...I really don't know how to explain; it's just something that I know just b

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