Get Free Checker

disyllabic

ADJECTIVE
  1. having or characterized by or consisting of two syllables

How To Use disyllabic In A Sentence

  • I think I'll stick to monosyllabic and disyllabic words today.
  • “New York tawk features a diphthongal aw sound,” Elster observes, “that in heavy New Yorkese sounds almost disyllabic.” The Right Word in the Right Place at the Right Time
  • A disyllable or disyllabic word has two syllables, a trisyllable or trisyllabic word has three.
  • However, although his actual name isn't Miltonic or especially literary, it is indeed trisyllabic with a disyllabic nickname, and Latinate, and has at least a sort of Early Modern connection. Ferule & Fescue
  • Treeswifts calls have been described as a squeal, with a few syllables grouped together to form a disyllabic or trisyllabic call.
  • I think I'll stick to monosyllabic and disyllabic words today.
  • A disyllable or disyllabic word has two syllables, a trisyllable or trisyllabic word has three.
  • A disyllable or disyllabic word has two syllables, a trisyllable or trisyllabic word has three.
  • The hieratic accent is discovered chiefly in the first half of the verse: where the natural accent of a disyllabic word is neglected and the stress falls constantly on the final syllable. Introduction
  • “New York tawk features a diphthongal aw sound,” Elster observes, “that in heavy New Yorkese sounds almost disyllabic.” The Right Word in the Right Place at the Right Time
View all