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Word Analysis

consubstanciara

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

5 syllables
15 characters
Spanish
Enriched
5syllables

consubstanciara

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

con-sub-stan-cia-ra

Pronunciation

/kon.sub.stan.ˈθja.ɾa/

Stress

00011

Morphemes

con- + substan- + -ciar-a

The word 'consubstanciara' is divided into five syllables: con-sub-stan-cia-ra. Stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('cia'). It's a verb form derived from Latin roots, with a prefix, root, and suffixes indicating verb formation and conjugation. Syllabification follows standard Spanish rules of vowel separation, consonant cluster maintenance, and stress placement.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    To give substance to; to materialize; to confirm; to substantiate.

    To substantiate, to materialize, to confirm.

    El informe consubstanciara las sospechas iniciales.

    Esperaba que la evidencia consubstanciara su testimonio.

Stress pattern

The primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('cia'). This is due to the presence of the final 'a' which shifts the stress back from the last syllable.

Syllables

5
con/kon/
sub/sub/
stan/stan/
cia/θja/
ra/ɾa/

con Open syllable, onset consonant /k/, vowel /o/, coda null.. sub Open syllable, onset consonant /s/, vowel /u/, coda null.. stan Closed syllable, onset consonant cluster /st/, vowel /a/, coda consonant /n/. cia Closed syllable, onset consonant /θ/, vowel /i/, coda consonant /a/. ra Open syllable, onset consonant /ɾ/, vowel /a/, coda null.

Vowel Separation

Vowels generally form separate syllables (e.g., 'con-sub').

Consonant Cluster Separation

Consonant clusters are maintained as single onsets or codas unless sonority allows separation.

Final Syllable Rule

The final syllable often consists of a single vowel or a consonant + vowel.

Stress Rule

Stress falls on the penultimate syllable if the word ends in a vowel, 'n', or 's'. Otherwise, it falls on the antepenultimate syllable.

  • The pronunciation of 'ci' as /θ/ (Spain) or /s/ (Latin America) is a regional variation that does not affect syllabification.
  • The word's relative infrequency does not alter the application of standard syllabification rules.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/13/2025
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