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Word Analysis

ommunikationsverantwortlicher

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

11 syllables
29 characters
German
Enriched
11syllables

kommunikationsverantwortlicher

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

kom-mu-ni-ka-ti-ons-ver-ant-wort-lich-er

Pronunciation

/ko.mu.ni.ka.tsi.ɔns.fɛɐ̯.ant.vɔʁt.li.çɐ/

Stress

10000001000

Morphemes

ver- + kommunikations- / antwort- + -lich- / -er

The word 'kommunikationsverantwortlicher' is a German compound noun syllabified based on vowel sounds and avoiding single-consonant syllables. The primary stress falls on the first syllable of the 'antwort' root. It consists of the prefix 'ver-', the roots 'kommunikations-' and 'antwort-', and the suffixes '-lich-' and '-er'.

Definitions

noun
  1. 1

    A person who is responsible for communication matters within an organization or context.

    Person responsible for communication

    Der Kommunikationsverantwortliche hat die Pressemitteilung verfasst.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the first syllable of the 'antwort' root (the 8th syllable). The stress is typical for German compound nouns.

Syllables

11
kom/kɔm/
mu/mu/
ni/ni/
ka/ka/
ti/tsi/
ons/ɔns/
ver/vɛɐ̯/
ant/ant/
wort/vɔʁt/
lich/lɪç/
er/ɐ/

kom Open syllable, initial syllable of the compound.. mu Open syllable, part of the 'kommunikations' root.. ni Open syllable, part of the 'kommunikations' root.. ka Open syllable, part of the 'kommunikations' root.. ti Open syllable, part of the 'kommunikations' root.. ons Closed syllable, ending the 'kommunikations' root.. ver Open syllable, prefix.. ant Open syllable, root.. wort Closed syllable, root.. lich Closed syllable, suffix.. er Open syllable, suffix.

Vowel-based division

Syllables are formed around vowel sounds.

Avoid single-consonant syllables

Consonants are grouped with a following vowel.

Digraph preservation

Digraphs like 'ch' are kept together within a syllable.

Compound word rule

Compound words are divided into their constituent parts.

  • German syllabification avoids leaving single consonants at the end of a syllable.
  • Regional variations in vowel pronunciation may exist but do not alter syllable division.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/7/2025
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