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accent

pronunciation style / stress / emphasis / to highlight / to stress

/ˈak.sənt/

Transitive Verb[C] Countable

In a linguistic context, an accent is the "audible fingerprint" of a person's origin. It captures the intersection of geography, social class, and native language. While often used neutrally, it can carry heavy social connotations, ranging from perceived prestige (e.g., Received Pronunciation) to stereotypes. When applied to music or speech patterns, the word shifts toward the concept of "weight" or "impact." It is about where the energy of a sound is concentrated to create rhythm or clarity. As a verb in aesthetics or design, it describes the act of highlighting. Unlike "highlighting," which can be broad, "accenting" usually implies using a small amount of something (like a color or a piece of jewelry) to draw attention to a specific feature without overwhelming it.

Whether referring to a person's regional way of speaking ('a thick Scottish accent') or the rhythmic stress on a syllable ('the accent is on the first syllable'), it is treated as a discrete, countable unit.

💬Casual Conversation

🎬Tuesday afternoon in the Martian outpost lounge, Tom is staring at a picture of rain.
Commander Tom

I'm losing it. I can almost hear my girlfriend's accent in the silence.

Commander Tom
Xylar
Xylar

Irrelevant. Please cease your moping and settle your overdue docking fee.

💡
Tom is being melodramatic about his homesickness, specifically missing the unique way his partner speaks (accent). Xylar dismisses this emotional vulnerability with cold, bureaucratic demands for payment, using 'losing it' as a colloquialism for having a mental breakdown.

Meanings

Noun

A distinctive mode of pronunciation of a language, especially one associated with a particular nation, area, or social class.

"She spoke with a slight French accent."

Noun

An emphasis or stress placed on a particular syllable in a word or a particular note in music.

"In the word 'banana', the accent falls on the second syllable."

Transitive Verb

To emphasize a particular feature of something to make it more prominent or attractive.

"The blue tie helps to accent his eyes."

Transitive Verb

To pronounce a word with a particular emphasis or stress.

"It is important to accent the correct syllable when speaking Spanish."

Etymology

Derived from the Latin accentus, which is a noun meaning a tone or inflection of the voice. This term evolved from the Latin verb accentus, the past participle of accentuare, meaning to emphasize or pronounce with a particular stress, which in turn stems from ad- meaning to and canere meaning to sing.

Related Words

Last Updated: June 9, 2026Report an Error