| 1. | prominence of a syllable in terms of differential loudness, or of pitch, or length, or of a combination of these. |
| 2. | degree of prominence of a syllable within a word and sometimes of a word within a phrase: primary accent; secondary accent. |
| 3. | a mark indicating stress (as (ʹ, ʹ), or (ˈ, ˌ), or (′, ″)), vowel quality (as French grave `, acute ´, circumflex ^), form (as French la “the” versus là “there”), or pitch. |
| 4. | any similar mark. |
| 5. | Prosody.
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| 6. | a musical tone or pattern of pitch inherent in a particular language either as a feature essential to the identification of a vowel or a syllable or to the general acoustic character of the language. Compare tone (def. 7). |
| 7. | Often, accents.
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| 8. | a mode of pronunciation, as pitch or tone, emphasis pattern, or intonation, characteristic of or peculiar to the speech of a particular person, group, or locality: French accent; Southern accent. Compare tone (def. 5). |
| 9. | such a mode of pronunciation recognized as being of foreign origin: He still speaks with an accent. |
| 10. | Music.
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| 11. | Mathematics.
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| 12. | words or tones expressive of some emotion. |
| 13. | accents, words; language; speech: He spoke in accents bold. |
| 14. | distinctive character or tone: an accent of whining complaint. |
| 15. | special attention, stress, or emphasis: an accent on accuracy. |
| 16. | a detail that is emphasized by contrasting with its surroundings: a room decorated in navy blue with two red vases as accents. |
| 17. | a distinctive but subordinate pattern, motif, color, flavor, or the like: The salad dressing had an accent of garlic. |
| 18. | to pronounce with prominence (a syllable within a word or a word within a phrase): to accent the first syllable of “into”; to accent the first word of “White House.” |
| 19. | to mark with a written accent or accents. |
| 20. | to give emphasis or prominence to; accentuate. |