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Word Analysis

full-happinessed

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

5 syllables
16 characters
English (GB)
Enriched
5syllables

fullhappinessed

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

full-hap-pi-ness-ed

Pronunciation

/fʊl ˈhæp.ɪ.nəs.ɪd/

Stress

01011

Morphemes

full + happy + ness

The word 'full-happinessed' is divided into five syllables: full-hap-pi-ness-ed. It's morphologically complex, combining the prefix 'full', root 'happy', and suffixes '-ness' and '-ed'. Stress falls on 'ness'. Syllable division follows standard English rules prioritizing vowel-consonant boundaries and maximizing onsets.

Definitions

adjective
  1. 1

    Characterized by a complete and profound state of happiness.

    She felt full-happinessed after receiving the good news.

Stress pattern

Primary stress on the third syllable ('ness'), secondary stress on the first syllable ('full').

Syllables

5
full/fʊl/
hap/hæp/
pi/pɪ/
ness/nəs/
ed/ɪd/

full Open syllable, unstressed, vowel reduction.. hap Closed syllable, stressed.. pi Closed syllable, unstressed.. ness Closed syllable, stressed.. ed Closed syllable, unstressed, schwa vowel.

Vowel followed by consonant(s)

Syllables are divided after vowels when followed by consonant(s), maximizing onsets.

Maximizing Onsets

Consonant clusters are generally kept together at the beginning of a syllable.

  • The unusual combination of 'full' and 'happiness' with the '-ed' suffix.
  • Potential vowel reduction in unstressed syllables.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/13/2025
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