How many syllables in constrain?

Constrain has 2 syllables and the stress is on the second syllable.

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Syllables in constrain

  • How many syllables in constrain?
    2 syllables
  • Divide constrain into syllables:
    con-strain
  • Stressed syllable in constrain:
    con-strain
  • How to pronounce constrain:
    kunstreyn
  • IPA-notation:
    kʌnstɹejˈn
  • Say it:
  • Spell it:
  • Numbers of characters:
    9 (a, c, i, n, n, o, r, s, t)
  • Unique letters:
    8 (a, c, i, n, o, r, s, t)
  • Constrain backwards:
    niartsnoc
  • Constrain sorted alphabetically:
    acinnorst
How many syllables in constrain?
2 syllables
Divide constrain into syllables
con-strain
Stressed syllable in constrain
con-strain
How to pronounce constrain
kunstreyn
IPA-notation
kʌnstɹejˈn
Say it
Spell it
Numbers of characters
9 (a, c, i, n, n, o, r, s, t)
Unique letters
8 (a, c, i, n, o, r, s, t)
constrain backwards
niartsnoc
constrain sorted alphabetically
acinnorst

Words like constrain

Constrain in a sentence

# Sentence  
1. Excessive reliance on monetary policy an attempt to curb inflation could unnecessarily constrain credit and hence business.
2. Changes in water availability, both episodic and long-lasting, will constrain different forms of energy production.
3. What human trespass would constrain thy power, O Zeus?
4. Scarce out of sight of Sicily, they set / their sails to sea, and merrily ploughed the main, / with brazen beaks, when Juno, harbouring yet / within her breast the ever-ranking pain, / mused thus: "Must I then from the work refrain, / nor keep this Trojan from the Latin throne, / baffled, forsooth, because the Fates constrain?"
5. Dragged by her tresses from Minerva's fane, / Cassandra comes, the Priameian maid, / stretching to heaven her burning eyes in vain, / her eyes, for bonds her tender hands constrain.
6. Once more Anchises bids us cross the main / and seek Ortygia, and the god constrain / by prayer to pardon and advise, what end / of evils to expect? what woes remain? / What fate hereafter shall our steps attend? / What rest for toil-worn men, and whitherward to wend?
7. "But ne'er the town, by Destiny assigned, / your walls shall gird, till famine's pangs constrain / to gnaw your boards, in quittance for our slain."
8. "This more, besides, I charge thee to obey, / if any faith to Helenus be due, / or skill in prophecy the seer display, / and mighty Phoebus hath inspired me true, / these warning words I urge, and oft will urge anew: / Seek Juno first; great Juno's power adore; / with suppliant gifts the potent queen constrain, / and winds shall waft thee to Italia's shore."
9. As another of our friends has said, translation is not about replacing one language with others. Translation will, on the contrary, help the language to enter the scientific field so that it can be promoted again and again. We should open our eyes: there is a huge difference between a translated language, which can be adopted, and an orphaned language whose mere diffusion would constrain it, even if that were not the original intention.

Definition

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