HyphenateIt
Word Discovery11 words

Words with Root “standard” in English (US)

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

All...

Total Words

11

Root

standard

Page

1 / 1

Showing

11 words

standard Old French/Latin origin, meaning 'fixed measure', root.

autostandardization
7 syllables19 letters
au·to·stan·dar·di·za·tion
/ˌɔːtoʊˌstændərdɪˈzeɪʃən/
noun

Autostandardization is a seven-syllable noun with primary stress on the penultimate syllable. It's formed from the prefix 'auto-', the root 'standard', and the suffix '-ization'. Syllabification follows vowel-based patterns and suffix separation rules. It describes the self-regulation of language norms.

nonstandardization
6 syllables18 letters
non·stand·ard·i·za·tion
/ˌnɑnˈstændərdˌaɪzeɪʃən/
noun

The word 'nonstandardization' is divided into six syllables (non-stand-ard-i-za-tion) with primary stress on 'ard'. It's a noun formed from the prefix 'non-', root 'standard', and suffixes '-ize' and '-ation', following standard English syllabification rules.

prestandardization
6 syllables18 letters
pre·stan·dar·di·za·tion
/ˌpriːstændərdɪˈzeɪʃən/
noun

The word 'prestandardization' is divided into six syllables: pre-stan-dar-di-za-tion. It consists of the prefix 'pre-', the root 'standard', and the suffixes '-ize' and '-ation'. Primary stress falls on the fourth syllable. Syllabification follows standard English onset-rime division rules, accounting for consonant clusters and vowel sounds.

restandardization
6 syllables17 letters
re·stan·dar·di·za·tion
/ˌriːˈstændərdɪˈzeɪʃən/
noun

The word 'restandardization' is divided into six syllables (re-stan-dar-di-za-tion) with primary stress on the fourth syllable. It's a noun formed from the prefix 're-', the root 'standard', and the suffixes '-ize' and '-ation'. Syllabification follows standard English rules based on vowel-consonant sequences and maximizing onsets and codas.

standardizations
5 syllables16 letters
stan·dard·i·za·tions
/ˈstændərdˌaɪzeɪʃənz/
noun

The word 'standardizations' is divided into five syllables: stan-dard-i-za-tions. The primary stress falls on the third syllable ('i'). It is morphologically composed of the prefix 'standard-', the root 'standard-', and the suffix '-izations'. The phonetic transcription is /ˈstændərdˌaɪzeɪʃənz/. Syllable division follows rules maximizing onsets and avoiding stranded consonants.

substandardization
6 syllables18 letters
sub·stand·ard·i·za·tion
/ˌsʌbˈstændərdˌaɪzeɪʃən/
noun

The word 'substandardization' is a six-syllable noun with primary stress on the third syllable ('ard'). It's formed from the prefix 'sub-', the root 'standard', and the suffix '-ardization'. Syllable division follows standard English onset-rime rules, with a linking vowel facilitating pronunciation.

substandardizing
5 syllables16 letters
sub·stan·dard·iz·ing
/ˌsʌbˈstændərdˌaɪzɪŋ/
verb

The word 'substandardizing' is divided into five syllables: sub-stan-dard-iz-ing. It consists of a Latin prefix 'sub-', a French/Latin root 'standard', and English suffixes '-ard', '-ize', and '-ing'. Primary stress falls on the third syllable ('dard'). Syllabification follows vowel and consonant cluster rules, with prefixes and suffixes generally forming separate syllables.

ultrastandardization
7 syllables20 letters
ul·tra·stan·dard·i·za·tion
/ˌʌl.trə.ˌstæn.dər.dɪˈzeɪ.ʃən/
noun

Ultrastandardization is a 7-syllable noun (ul-tra-stan-dard-i-za-tion) formed from the Latin prefix ultra- ('beyond'), the root standard, and the nominalizing suffix -ization. Primary stress falls on 'za'; secondary stress on 'ul' and 'stan'. IPA: /ˌʌl.trə.ˌstæn.dər.dɪˈzeɪ.ʃən/. Syllabification follows the Maximal Onset Principle and respects morpheme boundaries. The word denotes the process of imposing excessively high standards.

ultrastandardization
7 syllables20 letters
ul·tra·stan·dard·i·za·tion
/ˌʌltrəˈstændərdˌaɪzeɪʃən/
noun

Ultrastandardization is a seven-syllable noun stressed on the fourth syllable ('dard'). It's formed from 'ultra-', 'standard', and '-ization'. Syllabification follows US English rules, dividing based on onset-rime structure and allowing consonant clusters. It denotes exceeding standard levels and is used in technical contexts.

unstandardisable
6 syllables16 letters
un·stand·ard·is·a·ble
/ʌnˈstændərdˌaɪzəbl̩/
adjective

The word 'unstandardisable' is divided into six syllables: un-stand-ard-is-a-ble. It features a prefix 'un-', root 'standard', and multiple suffixes. Primary stress falls on the second syllable. Vowel reduction and a syllabic consonant are present.

unstandardizable
6 syllables16 letters
un·stand·ard·iz·a·ble
/ʌnˈstændərdˌaɪzəbl̩/
adjective

The word 'unstandardizable' is divided into six syllables: un-stand-ard-iz-a-ble. The primary stress falls on 'stand'. It's morphologically complex, built from the prefix 'un-', the root 'standard', and the suffix '-izable'. Syllabification follows the onset-rime principle and sonority sequencing.