HyphenateIt
Word Discovery5 words

Words with Suffix “--car-” in Spanish

Browse Spanish words ending with the suffix “--car-”, complete with pronunciations, syllable breakdowns, and linguistic insights.

All...

Total Words

5

Suffix

--car-

Page

1 / 1

Showing

5 words

--car- Latin '-care', verbal suffix.

embarbascariais
6 syllables15 letters
em·bar·bas·ca··ais
/em.baɾ.βas.kaˈɾi.ais/
verb

The word 'embarbascariais' is a rare Spanish verb form. It is divided into six syllables: em-bar-bas-ca-rí-ais, with stress on the penultimate syllable 'rí'. It's morphologically complex, comprising a prefix, root, and multiple suffixes. The 'bsc' consonant cluster is a notable feature.

enfurruscaramos
6 syllables15 letters
en·fu·rru·scar·a·mos
/en.fu.ruˈska.ɾa.mos/
verb

The word 'enfurruscaramos' is a first-person plural present indicative verb meaning 'we get angry'. It is divided into six syllables: en-fu-rru-scar-a-mos, with stress on the penultimate syllable 'scar'. The 'rr' cluster is treated as a single phoneme during syllabification.

envarbascariais
5 syllables15 letters
en·var·bas·ca·rais
/enβarβasˈkaɾais/
verb

The Spanish verb 'envarbascariais' is syllabified as en-var-bas-ca-rais, with primary stress on 'ca'. It's a complex form derived from Latin roots, meaning 'to overgrow with weeds'. Syllabification follows standard Spanish rules of vowel separation, consonant cluster maximization, and penultimate stress.

falsificariamos
6 syllables15 letters
fal·si·fi·ca·ria·mos
/falsi.fi.ka.ˈɾja.mos/
verb

The word 'falsificariamos' is a Spanish verb divided into six syllables: fal-si-fi-ca-ria-mos. The stress falls on the fourth syllable ('ca'). It's morphologically composed of a Latin-derived prefix, root, and suffixes, indicating a conditional verb form meaning 'we would falsify'.

ferrificariamos
6 syllables15 letters
fe·rri·fi·ca·ria·mos
/fe.ri.fi.ˈka.ɾja.mos/
verb

The word 'ferrificariamos' is a first-person plural conditional verb form. Syllabification follows standard Spanish rules, separating vowels and consonant clusters, and treating 'rr' as a syllable nucleus. Stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'ria'. The word is morphologically complex, with a Latin-derived prefix and root, and Spanish suffixes.