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Word Analysis

conjuramentasen

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

6 syllables
15 characters
Spanish
Enriched
6syllables

conjuramentasen

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

con-ju-ra-men-ta-sen

Pronunciation

/kon.xu.ɾa.ˈmen.ta.sen/

Stress

000100

Morphemes

con- + jur- + -amentasen

The Spanish verb 'conjuramentasen' (they would conjure) is syllabified as con-ju-ra-men-ta-sen, with stress on 'men'. It's formed from Latin roots and suffixes, and its division follows standard Spanish rules of vowel separation, consonant cluster splitting, and penultimate stress.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    Third-person plural imperfect subjunctive of 'conjurar'.

    they would conjure, they would plot

    Si ellos lo hubieran querido, lo habrían conjuramentasen.

    Los magos conjuramentasen para proteger el reino.

Stress pattern

The primary stress falls on the fifth syllable ('men'), which is the penultimate syllable because the word ends in a consonant other than 'n' or 's'.

Syllables

6
con/kon/
ju/xu/
ra/ɾa/
men/ˈmen/
ta/ta/
sen/sen/

con Open syllable, initial syllable.. ju Closed syllable, contains a diphthong.. ra Open syllable.. men Closed syllable, stressed syllable.. ta Open syllable.. sen Closed syllable, final syllable.

Vowel Separation

Vowels within a word are generally separated into different syllables (e.g., 'ju' in 'con-ju-ra').

Consonant Cluster Separation

Consonant clusters are split based on sonority, with the more sonorous sound moving to the following syllable (e.g., 'men' in 'con-ju-ra-men').

Penultimate Stress

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

  • The word's length and complex morphology require careful application of syllabification rules.
  • The diphthong 'ju' is standard and doesn't pose a challenge.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/13/2025
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