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Words of four or more syllables will always have Secondary Stress.
A)True.
B)False.

User Stf Kolev
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Final answer:

It's false that words with four or more syllables will always have secondary stress. Stress patterns depend on origin, sentence placement, and the complexities of English, and are reflected in poetic meters like iambic and trochee.

Step-by-step explanation:

The statement that words of four or more syllables will always have Secondary Stress is false.

The pattern of stress in any word, including those with multiple syllables, is determined by the word's language of origin, its placement within a sentence, and the nuances of speech.

Stress patterns in English can be complex due to the language's vast borrowing from other languages and its own historical developments.

For instance, the word 'organization' has four syllables but not all syllables are stressed equally; the secondary stress is typically on the first syllable with the primary stress on the third syllable.

Meter and rhythm in poetry often reflect these stress patterns.

Rhythmic patterns like iambic, trochee, anapest, and dactyl illustrate different combinations of stressed (/) and unstressed (x) syllables, which are not uniformly applied and vary depending on the word and context.

User Mikepenz
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