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200010” Stress Pattern in English (US)

Browse English (US) words with the “200010” rhythmic stress pattern, complete with pronunciations, syllable breakdowns, and linguistic insights.

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200010

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7 words

200010 Six syllables; secondary stress on syllable 1 (coun), primary stress on syllable 5 (gage), all others unstressed.

counterdisengagement
6 syllables20 letters
coun·ter·dis·en·gage·ment
/ˌkaʊn.tɚ.dɪs.ɪnˈɡeɪdʒ.mənt/
noun

Counterdisengagement is a six-syllable noun (coun-ter-dis-en-gage-ment) with secondary stress on the first syllable and primary stress on the fifth. It comprises the prefixes 'counter-' (opposition) and 'dis-' (reversal), the root 'engage' (to involve), and the nominalizing suffix '-ment.' The IPA transcription is /ˌkaʊn.tɚ.dɪs.ɪnˈɡeɪdʒ.mənt/. Morpheme boundaries govern syllable division, keeping each prefix and the suffix intact.

crystallizations
5 syllables16 letters
crys·tal·li·za·tions
/ˌkrɪs.tə.lɪˈzeɪ.ʃənz/
noun

The word 'crystallizations' /ˌkrɪs.tə.lɪˈzeɪ.ʃənz/ is a 5-syllable plural noun derived from Greek/Latin roots. Syllable division: crys-tal-li-za-tions. Secondary stress falls on 'crys'; primary stress on 'za'. The morphemic structure is crystal + -ize + -ation + -s. The '-tion' grapheme is pronounced /ʃən/, and the plural '-s' is voiced /z/.

homotransplantation
6 syllables19 letters
ho·mo·trans·plan·ta·tion
/ˌhoʊ.moʊ.træns.plæn.ˈteɪ.ʃən/
noun

Homotransplantation is a 6-syllable medical noun (ho-mo-trans-plan-ta-tion) composed of Greek prefix homo- ('same'), Latin root transplant, and suffix -ation. Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable (ta), with secondary stress on the first syllable (ho). IPA: /ˌhoʊ.moʊ.træns.plæn.ˈteɪ.ʃən/.

overinstructiveness
6 syllables19 letters
o·ver·in·struc·tive·ness
/ˌoʊvərɪnˈstrʌktɪvnəs/
noun

The word 'overinstructiveness' /ˌoʊvərɪnˈstrʌktɪvnəs/ is a 6-syllable noun formed from: over- (Germanic intensive prefix) + in- (Latin directional prefix) + struct (Latin root 'to build') + -ive (adjectival suffix) + -ness (nominal suffix). Syllabified as o-ver-in-struc-tive-ness with secondary stress on 'o' and primary stress on 'tive'. The division respects morpheme boundaries and applies Maximal Onset Principle with legal English onset clusters.

photophosphorescent
6 syllables19 letters
pho·to·phos·pho·res·cent
/ˌfoʊ.toʊ.fɑs.fəˈrɛs.ənt/
adjective

Photophosphorescent is a six-syllable adjective (pho-to-phos-pho-res-cent) with Greek prefix 'photo-' (light), Greek root 'phosphor-' (light-bearing), and Latin suffix '-escent' (becoming). Primary stress falls on 'res' (/ˈrɛs/), secondary on initial 'pho' (/ˌfoʊ/). Division follows morpheme boundaries and the Maximal Onset Principle, with 'sph' split due to illegal onset constraints. IPA: /ˌfoʊ.toʊ.fɑs.fəˈrɛs.ənt/.

sanguineophlegmatic
6 syllables19 letters
san·guine·o·phleg·mat·ic
/ˌsæŋ.ɡwɪn.oʊ.flɛɡˈmæt.ɪk/
adjective

Sanguineophlegmatic is a six-syllable compound adjective (san-guine-o-phleg-mat-ic) combining the Latin-derived 'sanguine' and Greek-derived 'phlegmatic' temperament terms with a linking vowel 'o'. Primary stress falls on 'mat' (syllable 5), with secondary stress on 'san' (syllable 1). The word follows standard English syllabification rules with morphological boundary sensitivity at the compound join.

thermophosphorescence
6 syllables21 letters
ther·mo·phos·pho·res·cence
/ˌθɜːr.moʊ.fɒs.fəˈrɛs.əns/
noun

Thermophosphorescence is a 6-syllable scientific noun: ther-mo-phos-pho-res-cence. It combines Greek 'thermo-' (heat) + 'phosphor-' (light-bearing) + Latin '-escence' (process). Primary stress falls on 'res' (syllable 5), secondary on 'ther' (syllable 1). IPA: /ˌθɜːr.moʊ.fɒs.fəˈrɛs.əns/. Syllabification follows morpheme boundaries and the Maximal Onset Principle.