I'll say the second one is. (The one on the right.)
winds has 1 syllable -*winds-* clap it winds
No, it is one billionth of a second.
One Second.
A trillionth of a second is a nanosecond.
If one considers English to be a native language of the U.S. (which could be a point of debate in itself), then Spanish would be the most-spoken foreign language and the dialects of the Chinese language would be the second most-spoken foreign language.
Turkish is spoken by many, but English is the second language.
The pronoun 'this' is the third person, the person or thing spoken about. The first person is the one speaking; the second person is the one spoken to.
Well, the word "word" is not composed of two syllables. It obviously only has one...
The number of second language speakers, Ethnologue says, and no one put that into question.
Irish is the first official language of Ireland and English is the second one. English is the more commonly spoken language.
Most has one syllable.
The pronoun 'it' is the third person, the thing spoken about.The first person is the one speaking (I, me, we, and us).The second person is the one spoke to (you).The third person is the one spoken about (he, him, she, her, they, them, and it).
Only one -- the second E is not pronounced.
The pronoun 'she' is the third person, the person spoken about. The pronoun 'she' is the singular, subject pronoun; the corresponding object pronoun is 'her'. The first person is the speaker (I or me). The second person is the one spoken to (you). The third person is the one spoken about (he, him, she, her, it, they, them).
The first person is the person speaking. The second person is the one spoken to. The third person is the one spoken about. The similarity is that they are all persons.
Your question is unclear. Syllables are a part of speech, the spoken word. Morse Code is a non-verbal form of communication and has no syllables. In Morse, the phrase "one syllable words" would be; --- -. . / ... -.-- .-.. .-.. .- -... .-.. . /.-- --- .-. -.. ...