HyphenateIt
Word Analysis

conmocionasteis

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

5 syllables
15 characters
Spanish
Enriched
5syllables

conmocionasteis

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

con-mo-cio-nas-teis

Pronunciation

/konmo.θjoˈnas.teis/

Stress

00010

Morphemes

con- + moc- + -cion-

The word 'conmocionasteis' is divided into five syllables: con-mo-cio-nas-teis. Stress falls on 'nas'. It's a verb form derived from Latin roots, meaning 'you all shocked'. Syllabification follows standard Spanish rules, breaking consonant clusters and prioritizing vowel endings.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    To deeply shock, disturb, or move emotionally.

    You all shocked/disturbed/moved.

    Las noticias de la tragedia los conmocionasteis profundamente.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the antepenultimate syllable ('nas').

Syllables

5
con/kon/
mo/mo/
cio/θjo/
nas/ˈnas/
teis/ˈteis/

con Open syllable, unstressed.. mo Open syllable, unstressed.. cio Closed syllable, unstressed (Castilian). /sjo/ (Latin American).. nas Closed syllable, primary stressed.. teis Closed syllable, unstressed.

Vowel Rule

Syllables generally end in a vowel.

Consonant Cluster Rule

Consonant clusters are broken after the first consonant if possible.

Stress Rule

Stress falls on the antepenultimate syllable when the word ends in a consonant other than *n* or *s*.

  • The *ci* digraph is treated as a single consonant sound for syllabification.
  • Regional variations in the pronunciation of *c* before *i* and *e* (Castilian /θ/ vs. Latin American /s/).
  • The *cion* sequence is a common nominal suffix and follows standard syllabification rules.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/13/2025
Open AI Chat