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Words with Root “miss-” in English (US)

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

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miss-

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8 words

miss- Latin origin, meaning 'send'

commissionerships
5 syllables17 letters
com·mis·sion·er·ships
/kəˈmɪʃənərʃɪps/
noun

Commissionerships is a five-syllable noun with stress on the third syllable (sion). It's morphologically complex, built from Latin and English elements, and its syllable division follows standard vowel-consonant rules.

impermissibility
7 syllables16 letters
im·per·mis·si·bil·i·ty
/ɪmpərˌmɪsəˈbɪləti/
noun

The word 'impermissibility' is divided into seven syllables: im-per-mis-si-bil-i-ty. The primary stress falls on the '-bil-' syllable. It's a noun formed from Latin roots with prefixes and suffixes indicating negation and a state of being not permissible. Syllable division follows standard English rules based on vowel and consonant patterns, with stress influenced by the morpheme -sible.

intromissibility
7 syllables16 letters
in·tro·mis·si·bil·i·ty
/ˌɪntrəˌmɪsəˈbɪləti/
noun

Intromissibility is a six-syllable noun with Latin roots and the suffix '-ibility'. Syllabification follows standard English rules, dividing around vowels and maintaining consonant clusters. Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable.

irremissibleness
6 syllables16 letters
ir·re·mis·si·ble·ness
/ˌɪrɪmɪˈsɪbl̩nəs/
noun

Irremissibleness is a six-syllable noun with primary stress on the fourth syllable ('ble'). It's formed from the prefix 'ir-', the root 'miss-', and the suffixes '-ible' and '-ness'. Syllabification follows standard English rules, including vowel-consonant division and the allowance of syllabic /l/.

nonpermissiveness
6 syllables17 letters
non·per·mis·si·ven·ess
/ˌnɑn.pərˈmɪs.ɪv.nəs/
noun

The word 'nonpermissiveness' is divided into six syllables: non-per-mis-si-ven-ess. It consists of the prefix 'non-', the root 'miss-', and the suffixes '-ive' and '-ness'. The primary stress falls on the fifth syllable ('ven'). Syllabification follows standard English rules of onset-rime and consonant-vowel division.

permissivenesses
6 syllables16 letters
per·mis·si·ven·ess·es
/pərˈmɪsɪvnəsɪz/
noun

The word 'permissivenesses' is a noun with six syllables, stressed on the fourth syllable ('ven'). It's formed from the Latin prefix 'per-', the root 'miss-', and the suffixes '-ive', '-ness', and '-es'. Syllabification follows principles of onset maximization and vowel sound separation. It's structurally similar to words like 'responsivenesses' and 'aggressivenesses'.

transmissibility
6 syllables16 letters
trans·mis·si·bil·i·ty
/trænsmɪsɪˈbɪlɪti/
noun

Transmissibility is a six-syllable noun with Latin roots. Syllable division follows maximizing onsets and vowel-consonant rules, with stress on the fourth syllable. It's structurally similar to other -ibility nouns.

unsubmissiveness
5 syllables16 letters
un·sub·mis·sive·ness
/ʌn.səbˈmɪs.ɪv.nəs/
noun

The word 'unsubmissiveness' is divided into five syllables: un-sub-mis-sive-ness. The primary stress falls on the fourth syllable ('sive'). It is a noun formed from multiple morphemes (prefix, root, and suffixes) with Latin and Old English origins. Syllable division follows the rules of maximizing onsets and dividing after vowels.