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Words with Prefix “grandi--” in Spanish

Browse Spanish words starting with the prefix “grandi--”, complete with pronunciations, syllable breakdowns, and linguistic insights.

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grandi--

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5 words

grandi-- Latin *grandis* - great, large; intensifier

grandilocuencia
5 syllables15 letters
gran·di·lo·cuen·cia
/ɡɾandi.lo.ˈkwen.θja/
noun

The word 'grandilocuencia' is divided into five syllables: gran-di-lo-cuen-cia. Stress falls on the penultimate syllable. It's a noun derived from Latin roots, meaning 'grandiloquence'. Syllable division follows standard Spanish rules of vowel-based separation and consonant cluster retention.

grandilocuentes
6 syllables15 letters
gra·ndi·lo·cu·en·tes
/ɡɾan.di.lo.ˈkweⁿ.tes/
adjective

The word 'grandilocuentes' is an adjective of Latin origin, divided into six syllables (gra-ndi-lo-cu-en-tes) with stress on the third syllable ('lo'). Syllable division follows standard Spanish vowel and consonant cluster rules. The word means 'bombastic' or 'pretentious'.

grandisonabamos
6 syllables15 letters
gran·di·so·na·ba·mos
/ɡɾandi.so.na.βa.mos/
verb

The word 'grandisonabamos' is a verb form divided into six syllables: gran-di-so-na-ba-mos. Stress falls on 'di'. It's morphologically composed of a Latin-derived prefix, root, and suffixes. Syllabification follows standard Spanish CV and CVC rules.

grandisonaramos
6 syllables15 letters
gran·di·so·na·ra·mos
/ɡɾan.di.so.na.ɾa.mos/
verb

The word 'grandisonaramos' is a Spanish verb form divided into six syllables: gran-di-so-na-ra-mos. It's formed from the prefix 'grandi-', the root '-son-', and the suffixes '-ar-amos'. The stress falls on the penultimate syllable. Syllabification follows standard Spanish rules of vowel separation and consonant cluster breaking.

grandisonariais
6 syllables15 letters
gra·ndi·so·na·ɾja·is
/ɡɾan.di.so.na.ɾja.is/
noun

The word 'grandisonariais' is divided into six syllables: gra-ndi-so-na-ɾja-is. The stress falls on the third syllable ('so'). It's a rare, archaic noun derived from Latin roots, and its syllabification follows standard Spanish rules for vowel-consonant and consonant-vowel divisions, with the stress determined by the penultimate syllable rule.