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Word Analysis

chachalaqueareis

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

6 syllables
16 characters
Spanish
Enriched
6syllables

chachalaqueareís

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

cha-cha-la-que-a-reís

Pronunciation

/t͡ʃa.t͡ʃa.la.ke.aˈɾei̯s/

Stress

000101

Morphemes

chachalaque + areis

Chachalaqueareis is a Spanish verb meaning 'to chachalaca'. It's divided into six syllables (cha-cha-la-que-a-reís) with stress on 'que'. Its structure reflects a complex morphology with an onomatopoeic root and Latin-derived suffix. The 'chach' sequence is permissible due to the affricate 'ch'.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    To act like a chachalaca bird; to make a chachalaca-like sound; to chatter noisily.

    To chachalaca

    ¿Por qué chachalaqueáis tanto?

    Los niños chachalaqueaban en el patio.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('que') due to the presence of an acute accent.

Syllables

6
cha/t͡ʃa/
cha/t͡ʃa/
la/la/
que/ke/
a/a/
reís/ɾei̯s/

cha Open syllable, initial consonant cluster treated as a single phoneme.. cha Open syllable, repetition of the initial syllable.. la Open syllable.. que Closed syllable, vowel 'u' is often silent.. a Open syllable, vowel alone.. reís Closed syllable, diphthong 'ei'.

Vowel Rule

Each vowel generally forms a separate syllable.

Consonant Rule

Consonants typically go with the following vowel.

Diphthong Rule

Diphthongs form a single syllable.

Affricate Rule

Affricates (like 'ch') are treated as single consonant sounds.

  • The word's colloquial nature and onomatopoeic origin might lead to regional pronunciation variations.
  • The silent 'u' in 'que' is a common feature of Spanish orthography.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/6/2025
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