HyphenateIt
Word Analysis

arrequesonariais

Complete linguistic analysis including syllable division, pronunciation, morphology, and definitions.

7 syllables
16 characters
Spanish
Enriched
7syllables

arrequesonariais

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

ar-re-que-so-na-ria-is

Pronunciation

/a.re.ke.so.na.ˈɾja.is/

Stress

0000010

Morphemes

reques- + -onariais

The word 'arrequesonariais' is a complex Spanish verb form divided into seven syllables: ar-re-que-so-na-ria-is. Stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'ria'. It's morphologically derived from the root 'reques-' (curdle) with several suffixes indicating verb tense, mood, and person. Syllabification follows standard Spanish rules of vowel-consonant separation and penultimate stress.

Definitions

Verb
  1. 1

    That you (plural, informal) would curdle.

    To curdle (cheese) - vosotros imperfect subjunctive

    Si arrequesonariais la leche, podríamos hacer queso fresco.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'ria' (marked as '1'). All other syllables are unstressed ('0').

Syllables

7
ar/aɾ/
re/ɾe/
que/ke/
so/so/
na/na/
ria/ˈɾja/
is/is/

ar Open syllable, vowel-sonorant consonant.. re Open syllable, consonant-vowel.. que Open syllable, consonant-vowel.. so Open syllable, vowel-consonant.. na Open syllable, vowel-consonant.. ria Stressed syllable, penultimate stress.. is Open syllable, vowel-consonant.

Vowel-Consonant

Syllables are typically divided between vowels and consonants (e.g., 're', 'so', 'na', 'is').

Penultimate Stress

Words ending in vowels, 'n', or 's' are stressed on the penultimate syllable (e.g., 'ria').

Open Syllables

Syllables ending in vowels are considered open (e.g., 'ar', 're', 'que').

  • The 'rr' is not a double 'r' but a single 'r' between vowels. Regional variations in /r/ pronunciation do not affect syllabification.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/6/2025
Open AI Chat