Accent

Accent << AK sehnt >>, in language, is an emphasis placed on a syllable in a word and is often called stress. Dictionaries usually indicate an accented syllable by a mark placed after the syllable. A secondary accent can be indicated by two marks or by one light accent mark. Accented syllables can also be shown by capital letters or italics. Where pronunciations are given in The World Book Encyclopedia, capital letters are used for the syllable with the primary accent and small capital letters for the secondary accent.

The tendency in English is to shift the accent toward the beginning of the word. The accent in the word re VOKE shifts toward the beginning in the form ir REV ocable. This tendency often causes a change in the language. The accent in the word balcony was once placed on the second syllable << bal CON y >> .

Words spelled in the same way are sometimes accented on different syllables. This usually means they have different meanings or different usages. The verb of a pair of identical words may have the accent on the second syllable, although the noun or adjective has it on the first. For example, ab SENT is the verb, while AB sent is the adjective. Accent is important in sentences as well as in words. The accent of a sentence can change its meaning completely. “You walked down the avenue” expresses four different meanings when the accent is put on you, walked, down, or avenue.

Accent, as in “foreign accent” or “English accent,” refers to differences in pronunciation. These differences indicate the speaker’s dialect or native language.