It depends on your dialect. You can either say it with a long "I" as in K(eye)L or as two syllables like K(eye) eL. The first way is a single syllable and the most common pronunciation.
2007-08-22 14:58:38
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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It depends on the variety of English one speaks. Those who distinguish words like file from words trial have 1 syllable in the former and 2 in the latter. Presumably then Kyle is also 1 syllable. But many English speakers make no distinction and have 2 syllables in both kinds of words.
Note: a name is a noun is a word.
2007-08-22 20:34:34
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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that could desire to desire to take a suggestions too long to describe. inspite of the undeniable fact that, it is trivial to tutor we share a hassle-loose ancestor with chimpanzees, and that's your grievance as properly. a million. We share dozens of ERVs. those are viruses that insert randomly into the genome. To have an comparable ones in an comparable region from separate an infection activities is impossible. the only clarification is one an infection adventure that the two lineages inherited. 2. human beings have 23 (haploid) chromosomes on the comparable time as different apes have 24. you are able to line them up between species, yet the two extra advantageous ape chromosomes line up thoroughly with human 2. Human 2 additionally has a degenerate centromere (chromosomes have one) and indoors telomeres (they're the top caps). this skill human beings at one element had 24 chromosomes. 3. As you're probable wakeful, human beings can not make nutrients C. it is easily very unusual, optimal animals could make it. inspite of the undeniable fact that, optimal primates can not. the only team that could desire to is general from fossil suggestions to be a lots off cut up. So those that at the instant are not any further waiting to make nutrients C are monophyletic. now no longer incredibly that, yet genome sequencing printed why we can't make it. the suited gene in ascorbic acid synthesis (l-gulonolactone oxidase) is broken. it particularly is a pseudogene, a gene that retains to be recognizable, yet now no longer smart. The thrilling element is all those primates have an comparable precise mutation it is inactivating the enzyme. yet yet another team of animals additionally can now no longer make nutrients C, the guinea pigs. they have a different mutation in an comparable gene. So each physique is expounded to different apes. for this reason evolution is actual.
2016-10-09 01:53:09
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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The way we pronounce it, it does have two syllables. My son's name is Carl, same thing. The way we pronounce it it is two syllables. The name as it is pronounced in German, however, it is only one, like this "Kol." I am not sure if Kyle is a German name, but it sounds like it. If it is German the "le" would barely be pronounced, just a very brief touch of the tongue to the forward roof of the mouth and it would be one syllable like "Kyl".
2007-08-22 14:59:41
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answer #4
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answered by Barbara E 4
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kyle is a two syllable word. .
the way you pronounce the word is in two segments. you need a vowel. pronounciation in one is incorrect pronounciation of the word.
and it doesnt matter if it is a noun or a verb. all words have syllables. it is phonics.
the Y in the middle changes the way we speak the word. our jaw drops when the word is spoken. technically the Y acts as a vowel.
2007-08-22 15:02:17
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answer #5
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answered by nnatindahat 4
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No, it's one syllable. The e on the end is silent. If it's supposed to be two syllables, it'd be "Kylie". In most cases! Some people spell weird!
It may sound like two syllables, though. I remember in grade school, my teacher marked me wrong for saying "wheel" has two syllables. In my dialect, we tend to say something like "wee-ul" but officially, it's only one syllable. We'd also say "Kye-ul."
2007-08-22 15:00:27
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answer #6
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answered by Madame M 7
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IT can be one or two.
For example:
It can be said the way of a boy's name with one syllable- Kyle .... or pronounced like a girl's name with two to sound like ky- lee.
2007-08-22 14:59:42
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answer #7
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answered by LM 5
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Seeing how there are many different dialects and diction in America these days, it could be pronounced with either one or two syllables.
One: (kahyl)
Two: (kahy-l)
It's really up to the way the person speaks.
2007-08-22 15:02:35
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answer #8
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answered by Steve B 3
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In the north: Ka-yel (2 syllables)
In the south: Kaihl (one syllable)
Guess it depends on where you live!
Nice name, either way.
2007-08-22 15:02:17
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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No, it is a one syllable word. But it can be said for effect as
Ky - el .
2007-08-22 14:59:53
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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