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Words with Root “advantage” in English (US)

Browse English (US) words sharing the root “advantage”, complete with pronunciations, syllable breakdowns, and linguistic insights.

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advantage

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12 words

advantage Noun meaning a favorable condition

counteradvantage
5 syllables16 letters
coun·ter·ad·van·tage
[ˌkaʊn.tər.æd.ˈvæn.tɪdʒ]
noun

The word 'counteradvantage' is a noun meaning a condition that offsets a disadvantage. It is divided into four syllables: coun-ter-ad-van-tage, with stress on the fourth syllable (van-). Syllabification follows standard English rules.

disadvantagedness
5 syllables17 letters
dis·ad·van·taged·ness
/dɪsædvænˈteɪdʒdənəs/
noun

The word 'disadvantagedness' is divided into five syllables: dis-ad-van-taged-ness. It consists of the prefix 'dis-', the root 'advantage', and the suffixes '-ed' and '-ness'. The primary stress falls on the fourth syllable ('taged'). Syllabification follows onset-rime division and considers stress assignment and suffix boundaries.

disadvantageously
6 syllables17 letters
dis·ad·van·tage·ous·ly
/ˌdɪsædˈvæntɪdʒəsli/
adverb

The word 'disadvantageously' is divided into six syllables: dis-ad-van-tage-ous-ly. The primary stress falls on the fourth syllable ('tage'). It's formed from the prefix 'dis-', the root 'advantage', and the suffixes '-age', '-ous', and '-ly'. Syllabification follows standard English onset-rime division rules.

disadvantageousness
6 syllables19 letters
dis·ad·van·ta·geous·ness
/ˌdɪsædˈvæntɪdʒəsˌnɛs/
noun

The word 'disadvantageousness' is divided into six syllables: dis-ad-van-ta-geous-ness. The primary stress falls on the fifth syllable ('geous'). It's a noun formed from the prefix 'dis-', the root 'advantage', and the suffixes '-ous' and '-ness'. Syllabification follows standard English vowel and consonant-vowel patterns, with stress influencing vowel quality.

disadvantageousness
6 syllables19 letters
dis·ad·van·ta·geous·ness
/ˌdɪs.əd.ˌvæn.ˈteɪ.dʒəs.nəs/
noun

Disadvantageousness is a six-syllable English noun /ˌdɪs.əd.ˌvæn.ˈteɪ.dʒəs.nəs/ composed of prefix 'dis-' + root 'advantage' + suffixes '-ous' and '-ness'. Primary stress falls on the fourth syllable 'ta,' with secondary stress on 'dis' and 'van.' The syllable division dis-ad-van-ta-geous-ness follows morphological boundary rules and the Maximal Onset Principle. The word means the quality of being unfavorable or detrimental.

nonadvantageously
6 syllables17 letters
non·ad·van·tage·ous·ly
/ˌnɑn.ædˈvæn.tɪdʒ.əs.li/
adverb

The word 'nonadvantageously' is divided into six syllables: non-ad-van-tage-ous-ly. The primary stress falls on 'tage'. It's an adverb formed from the root 'advantage' with the negative prefix 'non-' and the adverbial suffix 'ously'. Syllabification follows standard English rules based on vowel sounds and consonant clusters.

nonadvantageousness
6 syllables19 letters
non·ad·van·tage·ous·ness
/ˌnɑnədˈvæntɪdʒəsˌnɛs/
noun

The word 'nonadvantageousness' is divided into six syllables: non-ad-van-tage-ous-ness. It's formed from the prefix 'non-', the root 'advantage', and the suffixes '-ous' and '-ness'. Primary stress falls on 'tage', with secondary stress on 'non'. The syllabification follows standard English rules based on vowel-consonant patterns and stress placement.

nonadvantageousness
6 syllables19 letters
non·ad·van·ta·geous·ness
/ˌnɑn.æd.vænˈteɪ.dʒəs.nəs/
noun

Nonadvantageousness is a six-syllable abstract noun: non-ad-van-ta-geous-ness (/ˌnɑn.æd.vænˈteɪ.dʒəs.nəs/). It comprises the prefix 'non-' (negation), root 'advantage,' and suffixes '-ous' (adjective-forming) and '-ness' (noun-forming). Primary stress falls on the fourth syllable '-ta-' with secondary stress on 'non-'. Syllable boundaries respect morphological structure and English phonotactic constraints, notably avoiding the illegal onset /dv/.

predisadvantageously
7 syllables20 letters
pre·dis·ad·van·ta·geous·ly
/ˌpriː.dɪs.ədˌvæn.teɪ.dʒəs.li/
adverb

Predisadvantageously is a 7-syllable adverb: pre-dis-ad-van-ta-geous-ly. It combines Latin prefixes 'pre-' (before) and 'dis-' (negation) with the root 'advantage' and suffixes '-ous' (adjective) and '-ly' (adverb). Primary stress falls on 'ta' (/teɪ/), with secondary stress on 'pre' and 'van'. The syllabification follows morpheme boundary rules for prefixes and suffixes, and the Maximal Onset Principle for internal divisions.

predisadvantageously
7 syllables20 letters
pre·dis·ad·van·tage·ous·ly
/ˌpriːdɪsædˈvæntɪdʒəsli/
adverb

Predisadvantageously is a complex adverb with seven syllables, primary stress on 'tage', and secondary stress on 'pre'. It's formed by adding prefixes and suffixes to the root 'advantage', and its syllabification follows standard English phonological rules.

unadvantageousness
6 syllables18 letters
un·ad·van·ta·geous·ness
/ʌn.ædˈvæn.tɪ.dʒəs.nəs/
noun

The word 'unadvantageousness' is divided into six syllables: un-ad-van-ta-geous-ness. It consists of the prefix 'un-', the root 'advantage', and the suffixes '-ous' and '-ness'. Primary stress falls on the fifth syllable ('geous'). The pronunciation of 'geous' presents a slight phonetic exception.

undisadvantageous
6 syllables17 letters
un·dis·ad·van·tage·ous
/ˌʌn.dɪs.ædˈvæn.tɪ.dʒəs/
adjective

The word 'undisadvantageous' is a seven-syllable adjective with stress on the fourth syllable. It's formed from the prefix 'un-', the root 'advantage', and the suffix '-ous'. Syllabification follows maximizing onsets and vowel-consonant patterns. The IPA transcription is /ˌʌn.dɪs.ædˈvæn.tɪ.dʒəs/.