A syllable (σ) is a phonological unit of sonority. Sonority can be described by the degree of airflow obstruction and voicing that occurs during phonation. Sonority is inversely correlated with constriction of the articulators in the oral cavity. Sonorous sounds have a more ‘sing-able’ quality, that is they are more prominent in amplitude and length than less sonorous sounds. Sonority shows the resonance of one sound segment in relation to another.| Linguistics Network
In Section 10.2, we learned about how the word word can be used in many different ways. In addition, we defined many technical terms we…| The Linguistic Analysis of Word and Sentence Structures
Ever heard that Arabic has 10 million words? That English has a million? French has 80,000, or that the Alaskan Inuits have no word for love but 16 for snow? Why is that? Words are only words because we all mutually agree that they're words. Stare long enough and the semantic saturation will kick inRead More| Frank M Taylor
The hyphens CSS property specifies how words should be hyphenated when text wraps across multiple lines. It can prevent hyphenation entirely, hyphenate at manually-specified points within the text, or let the browser automatically insert hyphens where appropriate.| MDN Web Docs