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Word Analysis

chuchoqueasteis

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

5 syllables
15 characters
Spanish
Enriched
5syllables

chuchoqueasteis

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

chu-cho-que-as-teis

Pronunciation

/t͡ʃu.t͡ʃo.ˈke.as.teis/

Stress

00100

Morphemes

chuque + asteis

The word 'chuchoqueasteis' is divided into five syllables: chu-cho-que-as-teis. The stress falls on 'que'. It's a verb form with a root of uncertain origin and suffixes indicating past tense and 2nd person plural. Syllabification follows standard Spanish rules based on vowel nuclei and consonant clusters.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    To suck noisily, to smack one's lips, to chew with a loud smacking sound.

    To smack, to slurp

    Los niños chuchoqueaban la sopa.

    No chuchoquees, es de mala educación.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('que') due to the general Spanish stress rule for words ending in consonants.

Syllables

5
chu/t͡ʃu/
cho/t͡ʃo/
que/ke/
as/as/
teis/teis/

chu Open syllable, onset 't͡ʃ'. cho Open syllable, onset 't͡ʃ'. que Stressed, open syllable, onset 'k'. as Open syllable. teis Open syllable

Vowel Rule

Syllables are formed around vowels. Each vowel typically forms the nucleus of a syllable.

Consonant Cluster Rule

Consonant clusters ('ch', 'qu') are treated as single units for syllabification.

Penultimate Stress Rule

Words ending in consonants other than 'n' or 's' are stressed on the penultimate syllable.

  • The 'ch' digraph is treated as a single phoneme.
  • No significant regional variations affect syllabification.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/22/2025
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