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Word Analysis

esynchronisationserscheinungen

Complete linguistic analysis including syllable division, pronunciation, morphology, and definitions.

14 syllables
30 characters
German
Enriched
14syllables

esynchronisationationserscheinungen

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

e-syn-chro-ni-sa-ti-o-na-ti-ons-er-schei-nun-gen

Pronunciation

/eˈzʏ̃kronizaˈtsi̯oːn͡sɛʁʃaɪ̯nʊŋən/

Stress

01110111111111

Morphemes

e(s)- + synchron + isation-s-er-scheinung-en

The word 'esynchronisationserscheinungen' is a complex German noun formed through compounding and suffixation. Syllable division follows vowel-based rules and consonant cluster preservation. Primary stress falls on 'si', with secondary stress on 'chro'. The word describes phenomena related to synchronization.

Definitions

noun
  1. 1

    The appearance or manifestation of simultaneous occurrences; phenomena related to synchronization.

    Synchronization phenomena

    Die Wissenschaftler untersuchten die esynchronisationserscheinungen im Gehirn.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the syllable 'si' (ti in 'sati'). Secondary stress on 'chro'. Stress is distributed across multiple syllables due to the length of the word.

Syllables

14
e/e/
syn/zʏ̃/
chro/ˈkʁo/
ni/ˈni/
sa/za/
ti/ˈti/
o/oː/
na/ˈna/
ti/ˈti/
ons/ˈɔns/
er/ˈɛʁ/
schei/ˈʃaɪ/
nun/nʊŋ/
gen/ɡən/

e Open syllable, initial vowel.. syn Closed syllable, nasal vowel.. chro Closed syllable, primary stress.. ni Closed syllable, primary stress.. sa Open syllable.. ti Closed syllable, primary stress.. o Open syllable, long vowel.. na Open syllable, primary stress.. ti Closed syllable, primary stress.. ons Closed syllable, primary stress.. er Open syllable, primary stress.. schei Closed syllable, diphthong, primary stress.. nun Closed syllable.. gen Closed syllable.

Vowel Rule

Every vowel generally forms the nucleus of a syllable.

Consonant Cluster Rule

Consonant clusters are often kept together within a syllable.

Sonority Sequencing Principle

Syllables tend to follow a sonority hierarchy.

  • The *e(s)-* prefix is often reduced in pronunciation.
  • The *chron* syllable receives secondary stress.
  • The length of the word and multiple suffixes create a complex structure.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/7/2025
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