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201000” Stress Pattern in English (US)

Browse English (US) words with the “201000” rhythmic stress pattern, complete with pronunciations, syllable breakdowns, and linguistic insights.

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201000

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17 words

201000 Secondary stress on first syllable 'dis', primary stress on fourth syllable 'por', remaining syllables unstressed

disproportionateness
6 syllables20 letters
dis·pro·por·tion·ate·ness
/ˌdɪs.prəˈpɔːr.ʃən.ət.nəs/
noun

Disproportionateness is a 6-syllable noun (dis-pro-por-tion-ate-ness) with secondary stress on 'dis' and primary stress on 'por'. Morphologically: dis- (negating prefix) + proportion (Latin root) + -ate (adjectival suffix) + -ness (nominalizing suffix). The word means the quality of being disproportionate or lacking balance. IPA: /ˌdɪs.prəˈpɔːr.ʃən.ət.nəs/.

fastiduousnesses
6 syllables16 letters
fas·tid·u·ous·ness·es
/fæˌstɪdjuəsnəsɪz/
noun

Fastidiousnesses is a six-syllable plural noun (fas-tid-u-ous-ness-es) derived from Latin 'fastidium' via 'fastidiosus', with primary stress on 'tid' and secondary stress on 'fas'. The morphological structure layers the Latin root with the adjective suffix '-ous', Germanic noun suffix '-ness', and English plural '-es', each forming distinct syllables. IPA: /fæˌstɪdjuəsnəsɪz/.

incompassionateness
6 syllables19 letters
in·com·pas·sion·ate·ness
/ˌɪnkəmˈpæʃənətnəs/
noun

Incompassionateness is a six-syllable noun (in-com-pas-sion-ate-ness) with primary stress on 'pas' and secondary stress on 'in'. It combines the Latin negation prefix in-, the root compass(ion) meaning 'sympathy', and three suffixes (-ion, -ate, -ness) to form an abstract noun meaning 'lack of compassion'. IPA: /ˌɪnkəmˈpæʃənətnəs/.

incomprehensiveness
6 syllables19 letters
in·com·pre·hen·sive·ness
/ˌɪn.kɑːm.prɪˈhɛn.sɪv.nəs/
noun

Incomprehensiveness is a six-syllable noun (in-com-pre-hen-sive-ness) with primary stress on 'hen' and secondary stress on 'in'. It comprises the Latin negation prefix in-, the root comprehend (from Latin comprehendere), and the suffixes -ive and -ness. Syllabification follows morpheme boundaries and the Maximal Onset Principle, with /pr/ forming a legal onset. IPA: /ˌɪn.kɑːm.prɪˈhɛn.sɪv.nəs/.

interchangeableness
6 syllables19 letters
in·ter·change·a·ble·ness
/ˌɪntərˈtʃeɪndʒəbəlnəs/
noun

Interchangeableness is a 6-syllable noun (in-ter-change-a-ble-ness) derived from the root 'change' with prefix 'inter-' and suffixes '-able' and '-ness'. Primary stress falls on 'change' (syllable 3), with secondary stress on 'in' (syllable 1). IPA: /ˌɪntərˈtʃeɪndʒəbəlnəs/. The word follows standard English morphological syllabification, preserving prefix and suffix boundaries.

intermeddlesomeness
6 syllables19 letters
in·ter·med·dle·some·ness
/ˌɪn.tɚˈmɛd.l̩.səm.nəs/
noun

Intermeddlesomeness is a six-syllable noun: in-ter-med-dle-some-ness. It combines the Latin prefix 'inter-' with the root 'meddle' and suffixes '-some' and '-ness'. Primary stress falls on 'med' (3rd syllable), with secondary stress on 'in' (1st). The syllabification follows morphological boundaries and the consonant-le rule for '-dle'. IPA: /ˌɪn.tɚˈmɛd.l̩.səm.nəs/.

nonadvantageousness
6 syllables19 letters
non·ad·van·ta·geous·ness
/ˌnɑn.æd.vænˈteɪ.dʒəs.nəs/
noun

Nonadvantageousness is a six-syllable abstract noun: non-ad-van-ta-geous-ness (/ˌnɑn.æd.vænˈteɪ.dʒəs.nəs/). It comprises the prefix 'non-' (negation), root 'advantage,' and suffixes '-ous' (adjective-forming) and '-ness' (noun-forming). Primary stress falls on the fourth syllable '-ta-' with secondary stress on 'non-'. Syllable boundaries respect morphological structure and English phonotactic constraints, notably avoiding the illegal onset /dv/.

noncircumstantially
6 syllables19 letters
non·cir·cum·stan·tial·ly
/ˌnɑn.sɝ.kəm.ˈstæn.ʃə.li/
adverb

Noncircumstantially is a 6-syllable adverb (non-cir-cum-stan-tial-ly) with primary stress on 'stan' and secondary stress on 'non'. It combines the Latin negation prefix 'non-' with 'circumstantial' plus the adverbial suffix '-ly'. The IPA transcription is /ˌnɑn.sɝ.kəm.ˈstæn.ʃə.li/. Division follows morpheme boundaries and the Maximal Onset Principle while avoiding illegal consonant clusters.

nondemonstrableness
6 syllables19 letters
non·de·mon·stra·ble·ness
/ˌnɑn.dɪˈmɑn.strə.bəl.nəs/
noun

Nondemonstrableness is a 6-syllable noun (non-de-mon-stra-ble-ness) with secondary stress on 'non' and primary stress on 'mon'. It combines the Latin prefix 'non-' (negation), root 'demonstr-' (to show), and suffixes '-able' (capable of) and '-ness' (abstract noun). Syllabification follows morpheme boundaries and the Maximal Onset Principle, with 'str' and 'bl' as legal onset clusters. IPA: /ˌnɑn.dɪˈmɑn.strə.bəl.nəs/.

nondemonstrativeness
6 syllables20 letters
non·de·mon·stra·tive·ness
/ˌnɒn.dɛˈmɒn.strə.tɪv.nəs/
noun

Nondemonstrativeness is a six-syllable noun /ˌnɒn.dɛˈmɒn.strə.tɪv.nəs/ composed of the negating prefix 'non-', the Latin root 'demonstrat-', and the suffixes '-ive' and '-ness'. Primary stress falls on 'mon' (syllable 3) with secondary stress on 'non' (syllable 1). Syllable division follows morphological boundaries and the Maximal Onset Principle: non-de-mon-stra-tive-ness.

nonimpressionabness
6 syllables19 letters
non·im·pres·sion·ab·ness
/ˌnɒn.ɪmˈprɛʃ.ən.əb.nəs/
noun

Nonimpressionabness is a 6-syllable word (non-im-pres-sion-ab-ness) with primary stress on 'pres' and secondary stress on 'non'. It is a morphologically complex noun combining the prefix 'non-', the Latinate root 'impress', and suffixes '-ion', '-ab' (truncated '-able'), and '-ness'. IPA: /ˌnɒn.ɪmˈprɛʃ.ən.əb.nəs/. The word is non-standard; the expected form is 'nonimpressionableness'.

nonintermittentness
6 syllables19 letters
non·in·ter·mit·tent·ness
/ˌnɑn.ɪn.tərˈmɪt.ənt.nəs/
noun

Nonintermittentness is a six-syllable noun (non-in-ter-mit-tent-ness) with primary stress on 'mit' and secondary on 'non'. It combines the negation prefix 'non-', the Latin prefix 'inter-', the root 'mitt' from Latin 'mittere', and suffixes '-ent' and '-ness'. The word means the quality of being continuous without interruption. Syllabification follows morpheme boundary preservation and the maximal onset principle, with the geminate 'tt' divided between syllables.

nonmarriageableness
6 syllables19 letters
non·mar·riage·a·ble·ness
/ˌnɑnˌmærɪdʒəbəlnəs/
noun

Nonmarriageableness is a 6-syllable noun (non-mar-riage-a-ble-ness) with primary stress on 'mar' and secondary stress on 'non.' It combines the prefix 'non-' (not) + root 'marriage' + suffix '-able' (capable of) + suffix '-ness' (state of), meaning the quality of not being marriageable. IPA: /ˌnɑnˌmærɪdʒəbəlnəs/.

nonsacrilegiousness
6 syllables19 letters
non·sac·ri·le·gious·ness
/ˌnɒn.sæk.rɪˈliː.dʒəs.nəs/
noun

Nonsacrilegiousness is a six-syllable abstract noun (non-sac-ri-le-gious-ness) with secondary stress on 'non' and primary stress on 'le'. It combines the Latin negation prefix 'non-', the root 'sacrilege' (from Latin 'sacrilegium'), the adjectival suffix '-ious', and the nominal suffix '-ness'. The word means the quality of not being sacrilegious. IPA: /ˌnɒn.sæk.rɪˈliː.dʒəs.nəs/.

overdescriptiveness
6 syllables19 letters
o·ver·de·scrip·tive·ness
/ˌoʊ.vɚ.dɪˈskrɪp.tɪv.nəs/
noun

The word 'overdescriptiveness' is a six-syllable noun /ˌoʊ.vɚ.dɪˈskrɪp.tɪv.nəs/ divided as o-ver-de-scrip-tive-ness. It consists of the Germanic intensifying prefix 'over-', the Latin prefix 'de-', the Latin root 'script' (from 'scribere'), the adjectival suffix '-ive', and the nominalizing suffix '-ness'. Primary stress falls on 'scrip' (syllable 4), with secondary stress on 'o' (syllable 1). The word means the quality of being excessively descriptive.

schoolmasterishness
5 syllables19 letters
school·mas·ter·ish·ness
/ˌskuːlˈmæstərɪʃnəs/
noun

Schoolmasterishness is a 5-syllable noun formed from the compound 'schoolmaster' plus the suffixes '-ish' and '-ness.' Primary stress falls on 'mas,' with secondary stress on 'school.' Syllable division follows compound boundaries and the maximal onset principle: school-mas-ter-ish-ness. IPA: /ˌskuːlˈmæstərɪʃnəs/.

unproportionateness
6 syllables19 letters
un·pro·por·tion·ate·ness
/ˌʌnprəˌpoʊrʃənətnəs/
noun

The word 'unproportionateness' divides into six syllables: un-pro-por-tion-ate-ness. It comprises the negative prefix 'un-', the Latin root 'proportion', and the suffixes '-ate' (adjectival) and '-ness' (nominal). Primary stress falls on 'por' (syllable 3), with secondary stress on 'un' (syllable 1). The IPA transcription is /ˌʌnprəˌpoʊrʃənətnəs/. Syllable boundaries respect morphological units and apply the Maximal Onset Principle where legal clusters permit.