anfordringstilgodehavende
Syllables
an-for-dring-stil-go-de-ha-ven-de
Pronunciation
/ɑ̃ˈfɔːðʁiŋstiːlɡ̊oːðəˈhaːvənðə/
Stress
010000100
Morphemes
an- + fordring + -stilgodehavende
The word 'anfordringstilgodehavende' is a Danish noun with 9 syllables, formed by compounding several morphemes. Stress falls on the second and penultimate syllables. Syllable division follows vowel-initial and consonant-vowel rules, with considerations for Danish phonotactics and compound boundaries.
Definitions
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the second syllable (*-for-* in *anfordring*) and the penultimate syllable (*-ha-* in *tilgodehavende*).
Syllables
an — Open syllable. Initial vowel forms a syllable.. for — Open syllable. Initial consonant followed by vowel forms a syllable.. dring — Closed syllable. Consonant cluster followed by vowel, then consonant forms a syllable. /ðʁ/ cluster common but can be simplified.. stil — Closed syllable. Consonant cluster followed by vowel, then consonant forms a syllable.. go — Open syllable. Initial consonant followed by vowel forms a syllable.. de — Open syllable. Initial consonant followed by vowel forms a syllable.. ha — Open syllable. Initial consonant followed by vowel forms a syllable.. ven — Open syllable. Initial consonant followed by vowel forms a syllable.. de — Open syllable. Initial consonant followed by vowel forms a syllable.
Word Parts
an-
Germanic origin, intensifying/negative prefix, function less clear here, potentially related to 'on-'
fordring
Old Norse *förðring* - demand, claim, requirement
-stilgodehavende
linking element *-stil-* from *stil* meaning 'style' or 'manner', and *godehavende* from *have* - to have, present participle indicating possession
Vowel Initial Syllables
Any vowel at the beginning of a syllable constitutes a syllable on its own.
Consonant-Vowel Syllables
A consonant followed by a vowel forms a syllable.
Maximizing Onsets
The Maximal Onset Principle is applied where possible, but constrained by Danish phonotactics.
Compound Boundaries
Syllable boundaries are allowed at compound boundaries, even with consonant clusters.
- The /ðʁ/ cluster in *dring* is a common sequence in Danish, but can be subject to simplification in rapid speech.
- The linking element *-stil-* is a common feature of Danish compound words and facilitates syllable division.
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