preposition

Maybo

Key Member
Joined
Feb 23, 2017
Member Type
Student or Learner
Native Language
Chinese
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Hong Kong
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Hong Kong
Some people read PREposition, and some people read prepoSITion.

Are they both common?
 
All of the examples you linked us to have the main stress on the third syllable.
 
I heard some speakers have higher pitch on "pre" and some are lower.
In examples of Cambridge dictionary, I heard the speaker stressed "pre" very strongly.
 
I heard some speakers have higher pitch on "pre" and some are lower.
I don't know what that means. Pitch has nothing to do with stress. For example, some localised variants of English use a higher pitch (or a rising intonation) on the final syllable of every sentence. That doesn't mean they're not stressing the correct syllable of each word.
 
I don't know what that means. Pitch has nothing to do with stress. For example, some localised variants of English use a higher pitch (or a rising intonation) on the final syllable of every sentence. That doesn't mean they're not stressing the correct syllable of each word.
I feel like the Cambridge one is "PREpoSition". The oxford one is "prepoSITion".
 
I heard some speakers have higher pitch on "pre" and some are lower.
In examples of Cambridge dictionary, I heard the speaker STRESS "pre" very strongly.
 
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