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Words with Root “chafar” in Spanish

Browse Spanish words sharing the root “chafar”, complete with pronunciations, syllable breakdowns, and linguistic insights.

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chafar

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5 words

chafar From Arabic *shafr* meaning 'to grind, to mince'

chafarrinabamos
6 syllables15 letters
cha·far·ri·na·ba·mos
/tʃa.fa.ri.na.βa.mos/
verb

The word 'chafarrinabamos' is a Spanish verb divided into six syllables: cha-far-ri-na-ba-mos. The stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'ri'. It's formed from the root 'chafar' (to chop) and several suffixes indicating tense and person. The intervocalic 'b' is pronounced as /β/.

chafarrinariais
7 syllables15 letters
cha·far·ri·na·ri·a·is
[t͡ʃafaɾiˈnaɾjais]
verb

The word *chafarrinariais* is a first-person plural present conditional indicative form of the verb *chafar* (to cover, to stain). It is divided into six syllables: cha-far-ri-na-ri-a-is, with stress on the third syllable ('ri-'). It follows standard Spanish syllabification rules for verbs.

chafarrinariamos
7 syllables16 letters
cha·far·ra·ri·na·ria·mos
/tʃa.fa.ri.na.ˈɾja.mos/
verb

The word 'chafarrinariamos' is a complex Spanish verb form. It is divided into seven syllables: cha-far-ra-ri-na-ria-mos, with stress on the penultimate syllable 'ri'. It is derived from the root 'chafar' with several suffixes indicating verb conjugation and tense. The word describes a hypothetical action of scattering something messily.

chafarrinasemos
6 syllables15 letters
cha·far·ri·na·se·mos
/tʃa.fa.ri.ˈna.se.mos/
verb

The word 'chafarrinasemos' is a complex Spanish verb form. It is divided into six syllables: cha-far-ri-na-se-mos, with stress on the penultimate syllable 'na'. It is derived from the Arabic root 'chafar' and includes multiple suffixes indicating tense, mood, and person. The reduplication 'rr' intensifies the action.

chafarrinasteis
5 syllables15 letters
cha·fa·rri·nas·teis
/tʃa.fa.ri.nas.teis/
verb

The word 'chafarrinasteis' is a conjugated verb form. Syllabification follows vowel-centric rules, breaking consonant clusters after the first consonant. Stress falls on the antepenultimate syllable. The word's complexity arises from the initial 'ch' digraph, the 'rr' cluster, and the lengthy verb ending.