
Many students ask me about the rules for word stress in English.
I often recommend thinking about it less in terms of strict “rules” and more in terms of general “patterns” that have exceptions – as you’ll see in this lesson!
Word Stress for Two-Syllable Nouns & Adjectives:
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Most two-syllable nouns and adjectives are stressed on the first syllable:
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TA – ble
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DOC – tor
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HAP – py
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CLE – ver
- YEL – low
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However, there are many exceptions!
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gui – TAR
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ho – TEL
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bal – LOON
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cor – RECT
- u – NIQUE
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Word Stress for Two-Syllable Verbs:
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Most two-syllable verbs are stressed on the second syllable:
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re – LAX
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ar – RIVE
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be – GIN
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ex – PLAIN
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de – CIDE
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However, there are many exceptions!
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AN – swer
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STU – dy
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O – pen
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VIS – it
- HAP – pen
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Words Stress Patterns with Specific Suffixes
Some endings (suffixes) have predictable stress rules. Here are the most common ones:
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-tion / -sion / -cian β stress the syllable before the suffix:
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creAtion, deciSION, muSIcian, elecTRIcian
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-ic / -ical β stress the syllable before the suffix:
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geoGRAPHic, ecoNOMic, draMATical
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-ity / -ety β stress moves to the syllable before -ity:
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eLECtricity, posSIbility, soCIety
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-graphy / -logy / -nomy β stress the syllable two before the ending:
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phoTOgraphy, biOLogy, eCONomy
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-ee β stress falls directly on the suffix:
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employEE, refuGEE, traiNEE
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-eer β stress falls directly on the suffix:
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engiNEER, volunTEER, mountaineer
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-oon β stress falls directly on the suffix:
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balLOON, carTOON, salOON
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-esque β stress falls directly on the suffix:
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groTESQUE, picturESQUE
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Different Word Stress Between Nouns and Verbs
Some English words change meaning depending on which syllable is stressed:
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RE – cord (noun) β I bought a new REcord.
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re – CORD (verb) β Please reCORD the meeting.
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PRE – sent (noun/adjective) β I got a PREsent for my birthday. / All members are PREsent.
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pre – SENT (verb) β She will preSENT the report tomorrow.
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CON – tract (noun) β We signed the CONtract.
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con – TRACT (verb) β Muscles conTRACT when you exercise.
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PRO – duce (noun) β The store sells fresh PROduce.
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pro – DUCE (verb) β They proDUCE cars in that factory.
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OB – ject (noun) β That OBject looks heavy.
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ob – JECT (verb) β I obJECT to your comment.
π In general: nouns/adjectives often stress the first syllable, while the related verbs stress the second syllable.
Quick Tips for English Learners
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Use a dictionary to check stress (look for the Λ mark before the stressed syllable).
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Practice by listening and repeating audio of native English speakers.
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Remember: stress can change both pronunciation and meaning!
β Summary: Word Stress in English
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Two-syllable nouns/adjectives β usually first-syllable stress.
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Two-syllable verbs β usually second-syllable stress (with exceptions).
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Suffixes like -tion, -ic, -ity, -ee, -eer, -oon, -esque have predictable stress rules.
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Some words shift meaning with stress: REcord vs. reCORD.