Words with Root “sent-” in Danish
Browse Danish words sharing the root “sent-”, complete with pronunciations, syllable breakdowns, and linguistic insights.
Total Words
6
Root
sent-
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6 words
sent- Latin origin, core meaning of presenting.
The word 'præsentationsmulighederne' is a complex Danish noun divided into seven syllables (præ-sen-ta-tions-mulig-heder-ne). It exhibits agglutinative morphology with Latin-derived prefixes and suffixes, and Danish suffixes for plurality and definiteness. Primary stress falls on the third syllable. Syllabification follows onset maximization and vowel centering principles.
The word 'præsentationsprogrammernes' is a complex Danish noun meaning 'of the presentation programs'. Syllabification follows onset maximization and vowel peak principles, with stress on the first syllable. It demonstrates Danish's rich morphology through compounding and suffixation.
The word 'præsentationsudsendelsens' is a complex Danish noun meaning 'the presentation's sending out'. It's syllabified based on maximizing onsets and vowel nuclei, with primary stress on the third syllable. It's formed from Latin and Germanic roots with multiple suffixes indicating possession and action.
The word 'præsentationsudsendelsernes' is a complex Danish noun with nine syllables, exhibiting typical Danish syllabification patterns of onset maximization and vowel-consonant division. The primary stress falls on the third syllable. It's a genitive plural form meaning 'of the presentation broadcasts'.
The word 'repræsentationsomkostning' is a complex Danish noun with eight syllables, stressed on the penultimate syllable. It's a compound word formed from French and Latin roots, with a typical Danish syllable structure of open and closed syllables. Syllabification follows the principle of maximizing onsets and respecting morpheme boundaries.
The word 'repræsentationsomkostninger' is a complex Danish noun divided into nine syllables (re-præ-sen-ta-tions-om-kost-nin-ger). It's formed from Latin and French roots and suffixes, with primary stress on the 'sen' syllable. Syllable division follows vowel breaks, consonant cluster rules, and morpheme boundaries.