Words with Root “instrument” in English (US)
Browse English (US) words sharing the root “instrument”, complete with pronunciations, syllable breakdowns, and linguistic insights.
Total Words
5
Root
instrument
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5 words
instrument Latin origin (*instrumentum*), meaning 'tool, apparatus'
Bioinstrumentation is a six-syllable noun with stress on the penultimate syllable. Syllabification follows standard English rules based on vowel-consonant patterns and stress placement, with a Greek/Latin morphemic origin.
The word 'noninstrumentalistic' is divided into seven syllables: non-in-stru-men-tal-is-tic. The primary stress falls on the fifth syllable ('tal'). It's formed from the prefix 'non-', the root 'instrument', and the suffixes '-al', '-is', and '-tic'. It functions as an adjective meaning 'not relating to instruments or tools'.
The word 'noninstrumentalistic' divides into seven syllables: non-in-stru-men-tal-is-tic. The prefix 'non-' maintains its boundary, 'instrument' follows standard Latin-derived syllabification with the 'str' cluster as onset, and the suffix chain '-alistic' syllabifies with primary stress on 'tal'. IPA: /ˌnɑn.ɪn.strə.mɛnˈtæl.ɪ.stɪk/. Morphologically: non- (negative prefix) + instrument (Latin root) + -al-ist-ic (compound adjectival suffix).
The word 'noninstrumentally' is divided into six syllables: non-in-stru-men-tal-ly. It consists of the prefix 'non-', the root 'instrument', and the suffixes '-al' and '-ly'. Primary stress falls on the fourth syllable ('men'). Syllabification follows standard English rules regarding vowel-consonant sequences and prefix/suffix separation.
The word 'uninstrumentally' is divided into six syllables: un-in-stru-men-tal-ly. It consists of the prefix 'un-', the root 'instrument', and the suffixes '-al' and '-ly'. Primary stress falls on the fourth syllable. Syllabification follows the onset-rime principle and vowel-consonant-coda rules.