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Word Analysis

staatsorganisationsrechtlichem

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

10 syllables
30 characters
German
Enriched
10syllables

staatsorganisationsrechtslichem

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

staats-or-ga-ni-sa-ti-ons-rechts-lich-em

Pronunciation

/ʃtaːtsɔʁɡaniˈzaːtsjonsʁɛçtlɪçəm/

Stress

1000000100

Morphemes

staats + rechts + em

The word 'staatsorganisationsrechtlichem' is a complex German adjective formed through compounding and inflection. Syllable division follows the principles of onset maximization and vowel peak. Primary stress falls on 'Staats-'. The word relates to the law of state organization and is a typical example of German's ability to create long, complex words.

Definitions

adjective
  1. 1

    Relating to the law of state organization.

    relating to state organizational law

    Die staatsorganisationsrechtlichen Bestimmungen sind komplex.

Stress pattern

Primary stress on the first syllable ('Staats-'). Secondary stress on the syllable 'rechts-'. All other syllables are unstressed.

Syllables

10
staats/ʃtaːts/
or/ɔʁ/
ga/ɡa/
ni/ni/
sa/zaː/
ti/ti/
ons/jons/
rechts/ʁɛçts/
lich/lɪç/
em/əm/

staats Stressed syllable, closed syllable with 'ts' consonant cluster.. or Open syllable, vowel followed by a consonant.. ga Open syllable, vowel followed by a consonant.. ni Open syllable, vowel followed by a consonant.. sa Open syllable, vowel followed by a consonant.. ti Open syllable, vowel followed by a consonant.. ons Closed syllable, vowel followed by a consonant cluster.. rechts Closed syllable, vowel followed by a consonant cluster, secondary stress.. lich Closed syllable, vowel followed by a consonant cluster.. em Closed syllable, vowel followed by a consonant.

Onset Maximization

Consonant clusters are kept together as onsets whenever possible.

Vowel Peak

Each syllable must contain a vowel.

Sonority Sequencing

Syllables follow a sonority hierarchy, with vowels being more sonorous than consonants.

  • The word is a prime example of German compounding, leading to complex syllable structures.
  • The 'sch' cluster is treated as a single phoneme and onset.
  • The length of vowels can vary regionally, but syllable division remains consistent.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/7/2025
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