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Words with Root “fer” in English (US)

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

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Root

fer

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5 words

fer Latin *ferre* - to bear, carry

fructiferousness
5 syllables16 letters
fruct·i·fer·ous·ness
/ˌfrʌktɪˈfɛrəsnəs/
noun

The word 'fructiferousness' is divided into five syllables: fruct-i-fer-ous-ness. The primary stress falls on 'fer', with secondary stress on 'fruct'. It's morphologically complex, derived from Latin roots and suffixes, and follows standard English syllabification rules based on vowel-consonant patterns.

noninferentially
6 syllables16 letters
non·in·fer·en·tial·ly
/ˌnɑnɪnˌfɛrˈɛnʃəli/
adverb

The word 'noninferentially' is a seven-syllable adverb (non-in-fer-en-tial-ly) with primary stress on the fourth syllable. It's formed from Latin roots and English suffixes, requiring careful application of syllabification rules due to its length and complexity.

noninterferingly
6 syllables16 letters
non·in·ter·fer·ing·ly
/nɑnˌɪntərˈfɪrɪŋli/
adverb

The adverb 'noninterferingly' is syllabified as non-in-ter-fer-ing-ly, with primary stress on 'fer'. It's morphologically complex, built from the prefix 'non-', root 'fer-', combining form 'inter-', and suffixes '-ing' and '-ly'. Syllabification follows standard US English rules prioritizing vowel-coda structure.

splendiferousness
5 syllables17 letters
splen·di·fer·ous·ness
/splɛnˈdɪfərəsˌnɛs/
noun

Splendiferousness is a five-syllable noun with primary stress on the third syllable (fer). It's derived from Latin roots and follows standard English syllabification rules, maximizing onsets and adhering to vowel-consonant patterns. The word denotes a high degree of magnificence or brilliance.

transferableness
5 syllables16 letters
trans·fer·a·ble·ness
/trænsˈfɜːrəbl̩nəs/
noun

The word 'transferableness' is divided into five syllables: trans-fer-a-ble-ness. The primary stress falls on the third syllable. It's morphologically complex, built from the prefix 'trans-', root 'fer-', and suffixes '-able' and '-ness'. The syllable 'ble' contains a syllabic /l/. Syllabification follows standard vowel and consonant cluster rules.