Words with Root “accumulate” in English (US)
Browse English (US) words sharing the root “accumulate”, complete with pronunciations, syllable breakdowns, and linguistic insights.
Total Words
5
Root
accumulate
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5 words
accumulate Latin origin (*accumulare*), meaning 'to heap up', core meaning of gathering.
The word 'nonaccumulativeness' is divided into seven syllables: non-ac-cu-mu-la-tive-ness. The primary stress falls on the fifth syllable ('la'). It's a noun formed from the prefix 'non-', the root 'accumulate', and the suffixes '-ive' and '-ness'. Syllabification follows standard English rules of onset-rime, vowel-consonant, and consonant-vowel-consonant division.
Nonaccumulativeness is a 7-syllable abstract noun: non-ac-cu-mu-la-tive-ness /ˌnɑːn.ə.ˌkjuː.mjə.ˈleɪ.tɪv.nəs/. Primary stress falls on 'la' (5th syllable), with secondary stress on 'non' (1st) and 'cu' (3rd). The word combines the Latin negation prefix 'non-', the Latin root 'accumulate', and the suffixes '-ive' (adjectival) and '-ness' (nominal). Syllable boundaries respect morpheme boundaries (non-|ac|cu-mu-la-|tive|-ness) while applying the Maximal Onset Principle for intervocalic consonants.
The word 'overaccumulation' is divided into seven syllables: o-ver-ac-cu-mu-la-tion. It consists of the prefix 'over-', the root 'accumulate', and the suffix '-tion'. Primary stress falls on the fifth syllable ('mu'). Syllabification follows standard vowel-consonant and consonant cluster division rules.
Superaccumulation is a seven-syllable noun (su-per-ac-cu-mu-la-tion) with primary stress on the fifth syllable (mu). It's formed from Latin roots with standard English morphological and phonological processes, including prefixation, suffixation, and consonant cluster maximization.
The word 'unaccumulativeness' is divided into seven syllables: un-ac-cu-mu-la-tive-ness. It consists of the prefix 'un-', the root 'accumulate', and the suffixes '-ive' and '-ness'. Primary stress falls on the fifth syllable ('la'). The syllabification follows standard English rules of onset maximization and vowel nucleus requirements.