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Words with Suffix “--er” in English (GB)

Browse English (GB) words ending with the suffix “--er”, complete with pronunciations, syllable breakdowns, and linguistic insights.

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--er

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5 words

--er English origin, denotes a person who practices or studies something

anthropogeographer
6 syllables18 letters
an·thro·po·geo·graph·er
/ˌænθrɒpoʊˈdʒiːɒɡrəfər/
noun

The word 'anthropogeographer' is divided into six syllables: an-thro-po-geo-graph-er. The primary stress falls on the fifth syllable ('graph'). It's a compound word with Greek and English morphemes, and its syllabification follows standard English rules based on vowel-consonant patterns and morpheme boundaries.

microphotographer
6 syllables17 letters
mi·cro·pho·to·gra·pher
/ˌmaɪ.krə.fəˈtɒɡ.rə.fə/
noun

The word 'microphotographer' is divided into six syllables: mi-cro-pho-to-gra-pher. Stress falls on the penultimate syllable. It's a compound noun formed from Greek and English morphemes. Syllable division follows standard English rules based on vowel-consonant patterns.

neurotransmitter
5 syllables16 letters
neu·ro·trans·mit·ter
/ˌnjuːroʊtrænzˈmɪtər/
noun

The word 'neurotransmitter' is divided into five syllables: neu-ro-trans-mit-ter. It comprises the prefix 'neuro-', the root 'transmit-', and the suffix '-er'. Primary stress falls on the fourth syllable ('mit'). Syllabification follows standard vowel-consonant and consonant cluster rules, with typical vowel reduction in unstressed syllables.

photomicrographer
6 syllables17 letters
pho·to·mi·cro·graph·er
/ˌfoʊtoʊˈmaɪkrəʊɡræfər/
noun

The word 'photomicrographer' is divided into six syllables: pho-to-mi-cro-graph-er. It's a noun formed from Greek and English morphemes, with primary stress on the penultimate syllable. Syllabification follows standard English vowel-consonant and consonant cluster rules.

straightforwarder
4 syllables17 letters
straight·for·ward·er
/ˌstreɪtˈfɔːrwərdər/
adjective

The word 'straightforwarder' is divided into four syllables: straight-for-ward-er. It consists of the prefix 'straight-', root 'forward', and comparative suffix '-er'. Primary stress falls on 'for'. The silent 'gh' in 'straight' is a notable exception to standard syllabification rules.