The plural noun soldiers has two syllables. Sol-diers.
Soldiers is a noun; a plural, common noun. Collective nouns for soldiers include: A company of soldiers A boast of soldiers A division of soldiers A muster of soldiers A phalanx of soldiers A platoon of soldiers A troop of soldiers A squad of soldiers An army of soldiers A brigade of soldiers
The possessive form for the plural noun soldiers is soldiers'.Example: The soldiers' march took them across a river.
Soldiers
the south were the confedrate soldiers An the north were the union soldiers
The Soldiers was created in 2009.
A closed syllable. An open syllable. A vowel-consonant-e syllable. A vowel team syllable. A consonant-le syllable. An r-controlled syllable.
The second syllable of unique is a stressed syllable.
First syllable.
there are three in the word syllable
A weak syllable is unstressed. A strong syllable carries the stress.
An unstressed syllable is like the first syllable in around. A-round has the syllable as stronger and therefore stressed but the first syllable (which is "a") is unstressed.
The first syllable is accented.
The second syllable (-mand).
It is the first syllable.
Long syllable.
The first syllable.
no word it isn't possible because if you take away one syllable from a five syllable word you get a four syllable word and there is no such thing as a "no syllable word"