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Words with Prefix “tricho--” in English (GB)

Browse English (GB) words starting with the prefix “tricho--”, complete with pronunciations, syllable breakdowns, and linguistic insights.

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tricho--

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5 words

tricho-- From Greek *thrix* (hair), indicating hair-like structures.

Trichogrammatidae
6 syllables17 letters
Tri·cho·gram·ma·ti·dae
/ˌtrɪkoʊɡræˈmætɪdiː/
noun

Trichogrammatidae is a six-syllable noun (Tri-cho-gram-ma-ti-dae) with primary stress on the fourth syllable. It's a Greek/Latin hybrid, with 'tricho-' indicating hair-like structures, 'gramma-' relating to markings, and '-idae' denoting a family name. Syllabification follows standard English open/closed syllable rules.

trichocephaliasis
7 syllables17 letters
tri·cho·ceph·a·li·a·sis
/ˌtrɪk.oʊˌsɛf.əˈlaɪ.ə.sɪs/
noun

Trichocephaliasis is a seven-syllable noun with primary stress on the fifth syllable. It's derived from Greek roots indicating a hair-like head condition. Syllabification follows standard English rules, allowing consonant clusters and requiring a vowel in each syllable. The 'ceph' sequence may pose pronunciation challenges.

trichoepithelioma
8 syllables17 letters
tri·cho·e·pi·the·li·o·ma
/ˌtrɪk.oʊ.ɛp.ɪˈθiː.li.oʊ.mə/
noun

The word 'trichoepithelioma' is divided into eight syllables (tri-cho-e-pi-the-li-o-ma) based on CV structure and vowel-alone rules. Primary stress falls on the fifth syllable ('the'). It's a noun of Greek origin, denoting a benign tumor.

trichogrammatidae
6 syllables17 letters
tri·cho·gram·ma·ti·dae
/ˌtrɪk.oʊ.ɡræˈmætɪ.diː/
noun

The word 'trichogrammatidae' is a six-syllable noun with primary stress on the fifth syllable. It's derived from Greek and Latin roots, denoting a family of parasitic wasps. Syllable division follows standard English rules based on vowel-consonant patterns, resulting in tri-cho-gram-ma-ti-dae.

trichopathophobia
7 syllables17 letters
tri·cho·pa·tho·pho·bi·a
/ˌtrɪkoʊpæθoʊˈfoʊbiə/
noun

Trichopathophobia is a seven-syllable noun (tri-cho-pa-tho-pho-bi-a) with primary stress on the penultimate syllable. It's formed from Greek roots denoting 'hair,' 'suffering,' and 'fear.' Syllabification follows standard English onset-rime principles, vowel digraph rules, and consonant cluster maintenance.