HyphenateIt
Word Discovery5 words

Words with Root “chismorrea” in Spanish

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

All...

Total Words

5

Root

chismorrea

Page

1 / 1

Showing

5 words

chismorrea From *chismorreo* (gossip), Latin origin.

chismorreabamos
5 syllables15 letters
chi·smo·rrea·ba·mos
/t͡ʃismore.aˈβamos/
verb

The word 'chismorreabamos' is a verb in the imperfect indicative, first-person plural. It is divided into five syllables: chi-smo-rrea-ba-mos, with stress on the penultimate syllable 'rrea'. The 'rr' cluster is treated as a single phoneme within a syllable.

chismorreariais
6 syllables15 letters
chi·smo·rre·a·ri·ais
/t͡ʃismore.aˈɾajs/
verb

The word 'chismorreariais' is a Spanish verb in the conditional tense, meaning 'you (plural, informal) would gossip'. It's syllabified as chi-smo-rre-a-ri-ais, with stress on the penultimate syllable. Syllabification follows standard Spanish rules, maintaining consonant clusters and utilizing vowel-based syllable formation.

chismorreariamos
6 syllables16 letters
chi·smo·rre·a·ria·mos
/t͡ʃismore.aˈɾja.mos/
verb

The word 'chismorreariamos' is a complex Spanish verb form meaning 'we would have gossiped'. It is divided into six syllables: chi-smo-rre-a-ria-mos, with stress on the penultimate syllable 'ria'. The syllabification follows standard Spanish rules of vowel separation, consonant cluster splitting, and stress placement.

chismorreasemos
6 syllables15 letters
chi·smo·rre·a·se·mos
/t͡ʃismo.re.aˈse.mos/
verb

The word 'chismorreasemos' is a verb form with six syllables (chi-smo-rre-a-se-mos). The stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('re'). It's formed from the root 'chismorrea' and the suffix '-semos', indicating 'we' in the subjunctive mood. Syllabification follows standard CV patterns, with the geminate 'rr' treated as a single consonant cluster.

chismorreasteis
5 syllables15 letters
chi·smo·rre·as·teis
/t͡ʃismoreˈasteis/
verb

The word 'chismorreasteis' is a conjugated verb form. It is divided into five syllables following standard Spanish syllabification rules, with stress on the penultimate syllable. The morphemic analysis reveals a root related to gossip and a suffix indicating second-person plural past tense.