orange (1 or 2 syllables - based on accent - and 6 letters) apricot (3 syllables and 7 letters)
'What' is a four letter word, 'for' a three letter word, 'which' has five letters, 'yet' is spelled with three while 'it' has only two.
so if i have only three letters and if i have three it will be fewer the answer is LESS! (I caught that when i read it) it was so easy!
The word "deeded" contains only 2 letters that are each used three times within the word. It is the only such word in the English language.
The fad shop
The answer is chocolate.
Yes.
Yes.
There are two syllables in the word "Matthew" (Matthew has three letters, but two syllables: Mat-thew).
That is a riddle. The answer is "alphabet". It has three syllables, al-pha-bet, and the alphabet contains 26 letters.
The word happy has six letters and two syllables. The syllables of the word are hap-py.
alphabet
There are three syllables in the word syllables.
No, there are no words with more syllables than letters. Syllables are made up of letters, so a word with more syllables would naturally have more letters.
There are only three syllables in the word lavender. (La-ven-der)
18 syllables, 49 letters
No it isn't. It has two syllables. The first syllable has three letters but the second syllable has two letters. (Jel-ly)