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Word Analysis

chachalaqueariais

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

7 syllables
17 characters
Spanish
Enriched
7syllables

chachalaqueaais

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

cha-cha-la-que-a-rí-ais

Pronunciation

/tʃa.tʃa.la.ke.aˈɾi.ais/

Stress

0000101

Morphemes

chachalaquear + ía-is

The word 'chachalaqueariais' is a first-person plural conditional verb form. It is divided into seven syllables: cha-cha-la-que-a-rí-ais, with stress on the penultimate syllable 'rí'. The syllabification follows standard Spanish vowel-based rules, and the morphemic structure consists of the root 'chachalaquear' and the conditional suffix '-ía-is'.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    To chatter, to babble, to talk incessantly.

    We would chatter/babble.

    Si tuviéramos tiempo, chachalaquearíamos sobre viejos recuerdos.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('rí') due to the conditional ending '-ía'.

Syllables

7
cha/tʃa/
cha/tʃa/
la/la/
que/ke/
a/a/
/ɾi/
ais/ais/

cha Open syllable, initial syllable.. cha Open syllable, repeated consonant cluster.. la Open syllable, simple vowel-consonant structure.. que Open syllable, vowel-consonant structure.. a Open syllable, single vowel.. Open syllable, vowel preceded by a single consonant.. ais Open syllable, vowel followed by a single consonant, conditional ending.

Vowel Rule

Each vowel generally forms a separate syllable.

Consonant Cluster Rule

Consonant clusters are broken according to the strongest sonority transition, but in this case, the 'ch' is treated as a single phoneme.

Penultimate Stress Rule

Words ending in vowels, 'n', or 's' are stressed on the penultimate syllable.

  • The double 'ch' is treated as a single phoneme /tʃ/ and doesn't affect syllabification.
  • The conditional ending '-ía' dictates the stress pattern.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/5/2025
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