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Words with Root “substance” in English (US)

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

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Root

substance

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7 words

substance Latin *substantia*, meaning essence, matter.

insubstantiality
7 syllables16 letters
in·sub·stan·ti·a·li·ty
/ˌɪnsəbˈstænʃəˌlætɪ/
noun

The word 'insubstantiality' is divided into seven syllables: in-sub-stan-ti-a-li-ty. Primary stress falls on the fourth syllable ('ti'). It's morphologically complex, built from the prefix 'in-', root 'substance', and suffixes '-al' and '-ity'. The syllabification follows standard English onset-rime division rules.

insubstantialize
6 syllables16 letters
in·sub·stan·ti·a·lize
/ˌɪn.səbˈstæn.ʃə.laɪz/
verb

The word 'insubstantialize' is divided into six syllables: in-sub-stan-ti-a-lize. The primary stress falls on the third syllable ('stan'). It's a verb formed from the prefix 'in-', the root 'substance', and the suffix '-ialize'. Syllable division follows standard English onset-rime rules.

nonsubstantiality
7 syllables17 letters
non·sub·stan·ti·al·i·ty
/nɑn.sʌbˈstæn.ʃə.læt̬.i/
noun

The word 'nonsubstantiality' is divided into seven syllables: non-sub-stan-ti-al-i-ty. Primary stress falls on the fourth syllable ('ti'). It's a noun formed from the prefix 'non-', the root 'substance', and the suffixes '-al' and '-ity'. Syllable division follows standard English rules of vowel-consonant separation and suffix isolation.

nonsubstantialness
5 syllables18 letters
non·sub·stan·tial·ness
/nɑn.səbˈstæn.ʃəl.nəs/
noun

Nonsubstantialness is a five-syllable noun (non-sub-stan-tial-ness) with primary stress on 'stan'. It's formed from the prefix 'non-', root 'substance', and suffixes '-ial' and '-ness', following standard English syllabification rules based on vowel-consonant patterns.

nonsubstantively
5 syllables16 letters
non·sub·stan·tiv·ly
/ˌnɑn.səbˈstæn.tɪv.li/
adverb

The adverb 'nonsubstantively' is divided into five syllables (non-sub-stan-tiv-ly) with stress on the fourth. It follows standard English syllabification rules, utilizing morphemic structure and maximizing onsets. It means 'in a manner lacking substance' and is formed from the prefix 'non-', root 'substance', and suffixes '-ive' and '-ly'.

nonsubstantiveness
5 syllables18 letters
non·sub·stan·tive·ness
/ˌnɑn.sʌbˈstæn.tɪv.nəs/
noun

Nonsubstantiveness is a five-syllable noun meaning the lack of substance. Syllabification follows vowel principle and onset-rime structure, with stress on the fourth syllable (tive). It's composed of the prefix 'non-', root 'substance', and suffix '-ness'.

resubstantiating
6 syllables16 letters
re·sub·stan·ti·at·ing
/ˌriːsʌbˈstæntiˌeɪtɪŋ/
verb

The word 'resubstantiating' is divided into six syllables: re-sub-stan-ti-at-ing, with primary stress on the fourth syllable ('at'). It's morphologically complex, consisting of the prefix 're-', the root 'substance', and the suffix '-tiating'. Syllable division follows standard English rules based on vowel-consonant and consonant-vowel patterns.