Words with Root “platitude” in English (US)
Browse English (US) words sharing the root “platitude”, complete with pronunciations, syllable breakdowns, and linguistic insights.
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platitude
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4 words
platitude French/Latin origin, meaning commonplace remark
The word 'nonplatitudinously' is a seven-syllable adverb with primary stress on the fourth syllable. It's formed from the prefix 'non-', the root 'platitude', and the suffixes '-inous' and '-ly'. Syllabification follows standard English rules of onset-rime division and vowel-consonant separation.
The word 'unplatitudinously' is divided into seven syllables: un-pla-ti-tu-di-nous-ly. The primary stress falls on the fourth syllable ('tu'). It's an adverb formed from the root 'platitude' with the prefixes 'un-' and suffixes '-inously'. Syllabification follows vowel and consonant cluster rules typical of English.
The word 'unplatitudinousness' is divided into seven syllables: un-pla-ti-tu-di-nous-ness. The primary stress falls on the fifth syllable ('di'). It's a noun formed from the prefix 'un-', the root 'platitude', and the suffixes '-ous' and '-ness'. Syllabification follows the principles of maximizing onsets and requiring a vowel nucleus in each syllable.
Unplatitudinousness is a 7-syllable abstract noun (un-plat-i-tu-di-nous-ness) with primary stress on 'tu' and secondary stress on 'un'. It derives from 'platitude' via affixation: prefix 'un-' (negation) + root 'platitude' + suffix '-ous' (adjectival) + suffix '-ness' (nominal). The word means the quality of not being platitudinous, i.e., originality or freshness. IPA: /ˌʌn.plæt.ɪˈtjuː.dɪ.nəs.nəs/.