“20200010” Stress Pattern in English (US)
Browse English (US) words with the “20200010” rhythmic stress pattern, complete with pronunciations, syllable breakdowns, and linguistic insights.
Total Words
20
Pattern
20200010
Page
1 / 1
Showing
20 words
20200010 Eight syllables: secondary stress on 'cet' (2), secondary on 'phen' (2), primary stress on 'draz' (1), all others unstressed (0).
Acetylphenylhydrazine is an 8-syllable chemical compound name divided at morpheme boundaries: a-cet-yl-phen-yl-hy-draz-ine. It comprises the prefix acetyl- (CH₃CO- group), roots phenyl- (C₆H₅-) and hydraz- (N₂H₄ derivative), and suffix -ine (amine marker). Primary stress falls on 'draz'; secondary stresses on 'cet' and 'phen'. IPA: /əˌsɛt.əlˌfɛn.əl.haɪˈdræz.iːn/.
Chlorotrifluoromethane is an 8-syllable chemical compound name: chlo-ro-tri-flu-o-ro-meth-ane. It comprises four morphemes: chloro- (chlorine), tri- (three), fluoro- (fluorine), and methane (single-carbon saturated hydrocarbon). Primary stress falls on 'meth'; secondary stress on 'chlo' and 'tri'. IPA: /ˌklɔːroʊˌtraɪflʊəroʊˈmɛθeɪn/. Syllabification follows morphological boundaries and the Maximal Onset Principle with legal English onset clusters.
Constitutionalization is an 8-syllable noun derived from Latin roots with layered suffixes (-ion, -al, -ize, -ation). Syllabified as con-sti-tu-tion-al-i-za-tion with primary stress on 'za' (syllable 7) and secondary stress on 'con' and 'tu'. The word follows standard English rules for Latinate vocabulary, with morpheme boundaries guiding syllable division and palatalization affecting 'tion' segments.
Electrocauterization divides into 8 syllables (e-lec-tro-cau-ter-i-za-tion) following morpheme boundaries (electro- + cauter- + -ization) and the Maximal Onset Principle. Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable before -tion, with secondary stresses on the prefix and root. IPA: /ɪˌlɛktroʊˌkɔːtərɪˈzeɪʃən/. Medical noun referring to tissue destruction using electrically heated instruments.
Electroencephalograms is an eight-syllable Greek-derived medical term (e-lec-tro-en-ceph-a-lo-grams) with primary stress on 'lo' and secondary stresses on 'lec' and 'ceph'. It combines 'electro-' (electricity), 'encephal-' (brain), '-gram' (record), and '-s' (plural). Syllabification follows the Maximal Onset Principle while respecting morpheme boundaries and avoiding illegal consonant clusters as onsets.
Gastroalbuminorrhea is an 8-syllable Greek-Latin medical compound: gas-tro-al-bu-mi-no-rrhe-a. It combines gastro- (stomach), albumin- (protein), and -rrhea (flow). Primary stress falls on 'rrhe' /riː/, with secondary stress on 'gas' and 'al'. The digraph 'rrh' represents single /r/. Syllabification respects morpheme boundaries and applies the Maximal Onset Principle where phonotactically legal. IPA: /ˌɡæstroʊˌælbjʊmɪnəˈriːə/.
Gastroenterocolitis is an 8-syllable Greek-derived medical compound (gas-tro-en-ter-o-co-li-tis) combining gastro- (stomach), entero- (intestine), col- (colon), and -itis (inflammation). Primary stress falls on 'li'; secondary stress on 'gas' and 'en'. Syllabification respects morpheme boundaries while applying the Maximal Onset Principle for legal consonant clusters.
Hyperdolichocephalic is an 8-syllable Greek-derived anatomical adjective (hy-per-dol-i-cho-ce-phal-ic) meaning extremely long-headed. It combines hyper- (excessive) + dolicho- (long) + cephal- (head) + -ic (adjectival). Primary stress on 'phal'; secondary on 'hy' and 'dol'. Syllabification follows morpheme boundaries with Greek digraphs ch=/k/ and ph=/f/ treated as single consonants.
Institutionalisation is an 8-syllable noun (in-sti-tu-tion-al-i-sa-tion) with primary stress on the seventh syllable. It derives from Latin 'statuere' with multiple suffixes creating a complex morphological structure. The word follows standard English syllabification rules with morpheme boundaries preserved at prefix and suffix junctures. The -tion sequences are pronounced /ʃən/ due to palatalization. British and American variants differ in spelling (-isation vs -ization) but not in syllable structure.
Institutionalization is an 8-syllable noun (in-sti-tu-tion-al-i-za-tion) with primary stress on '-za-' and secondary stress on 'in-' and 'tu-'. It derives from Latin 'instituere' through multiple suffixation (-tion → -al → -ize → -ation). The syllabification follows Maximal Onset Principle and morpheme boundary rules, with <tion> pronounced /ʃən/. IPA: /ˌɪn.stɪ.ˌtuː.ʃən.əl.aɪˈzeɪ.ʃən/.
Intellectualisation is an 8-syllable British English noun /ˌɪntəˌlɛktʃuəlaɪˈzeɪʃən/ derived from Latin 'intellectus' plus four suffixes (-ual, -ise, -ation). Primary stress falls on the 7th syllable (sa-), with secondary stress on syllables 1 and 3. The word divides as in-tel-lec-tu-al-i-sa-tion, respecting morpheme boundaries and applying maximal onset where legal. Notable features include yod-coalescence in 'tu' and the standard -tion → /ʃən/ realization.
Intellectualizations divides into 8 syllables: in-tel-lec-tu-al-i-za-tions. It is a Latin-derived noun with prefix 'in-', root 'intellect', and suffixes '-ual-ize-ation-s'. Primary stress falls on 'za' (7th syllable) following the Latinate -ation stress rule; secondary stresses on 'in' and 'lec'. IPA: /ˌɪn.tə.ˌlɛk.tʃu.ə.lɪˈzeɪ.ʃənz/.
Interesterification is an 8-syllable chemistry noun (in-ter-es-ter-i-fi-ca-tion) composed of Latin prefix 'inter-', root 'ester', and suffix '-ification'. Primary stress falls on 'ca' /keɪ/, with secondary stress on 'in' and 'es'. IPA: /ˌɪn.tər.ˌɛs.tər.ɪ.fɪˈkeɪ.ʃən/. Morphological boundaries are preserved; maximal onset principle governs intervocalic consonant assignment.
Nonindustrialization is an 8-syllable noun (non-in-dus-tri-al-i-za-tion) with primary stress on 'za' and secondary stress on 'non' and 'dus'. It consists of the prefix 'non-' attached to 'industrialization', which itself derives from Latin 'industria' with Greek and Latin suffixes. Syllable boundaries follow morpheme boundaries, and the '-tion' suffix forms a single syllable despite its four-letter spelling.
Overrationalization is an 8-syllable noun (o-ver-ra-tion-al-i-za-tion) with primary stress on '-za-' and secondary stress on 'o-' and 'ra-'. It derives from Latin 'ratio' with prefix 'over-' and suffixes '-al', '-ize', '-ation'. IPA: /ˌoʊ.vɚˌræʃ.ə.nəl.ɪˈzeɪ.ʃən/. The word means excessive application of rational thinking.
Phenolsulphonephthalein is an 8-syllable chemical compound noun: phe-nol-sul-pho-ne-phtha-le-in. It combines three morphemes (phenol + sulphone + phthalein) of Greek/Latin origin. Primary stress falls on the 7th syllable (-le-), with secondary stresses on syllables 1 and 3. The unusual /fθ/ cluster in 'phtha-' is a legal English onset. IPA: /ˌfiːnɒlˌsʌlfoʊnˈfθæliːɪn/.
Photospectroheliograph is an 8-syllable technical compound (pho-to-spec-tro-he-li-o-graph) combining Greek 'photo-' (light), Latin 'spectro-' (spectrum), Greek 'helio-' (sun), and Greek '-graph' (recording instrument). Primary stress falls on the final syllable 'graph', with secondary stresses on 'pho', 'spec', and 'he'. Syllabification follows morpheme boundaries and the maximal onset principle within each combining form.
Proindustrialisation is an 8-syllable noun (pro-in-dus-tri-al-i-sa-tion) with primary stress on '-sa-' and secondary stress on 'pro-' and 'dus-'. It combines the prefix 'pro-' (Latin, 'for') with 'industrialisation' (from Latin 'industria' + suffixes '-al' and '-isation'). The word follows standard English syllabification rules with prefix isolation, maximal onset application, and suffix boundary recognition. British spelling variant of 'proindustrialization'.
Scientificoreligious is an 8-syllable compound adjective (sci-en-tif-i-co-re-li-gious) combining 'scientific' and 'religious' via the Latin linking vowel 'o'. Primary stress falls on 'li' with secondary stress on 'sci' and 'tif'. IPA: /ˌsaɪ.ən.ˈtɪf.ɪ.koʊ.rɪˈlɪdʒ.əs/. The word describes concepts relating to both science and religion.
Ultradolichocephalic is an 8-syllable adjective (ul-tra-dol-i-cho-ce-phal-ic) from Latin ultra- (beyond) and Greek dolicho- (long) + cephal- (head) + -ic. Primary stress falls on 'phal' with secondary stress on 'ul' and 'dol'. IPA: /ˌʌl.trə.ˌdɑː.lɪ.koʊ.sə.ˈfæl.ɪk/. It describes an extremely elongated skull shape. Syllabification follows morpheme boundaries and respects Greek digraphs (ch=/k/, ph=/f/).