consustanciemos
Syllables
con-sus-tan-ci-e-mos
Pronunciation
/kon.sus.tan.θjaˈe.mos/
Stress
000101
Morphemes
con- + sustan- + -ci-em-os
The word 'consustanciemos' is a Spanish verb divided into six syllables: con-sus-tan-ci-e-mos. It's formed from the prefix 'con-', the root 'sustan-', and the suffixes '-ci-em-os'. The primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable. Syllabification follows standard Spanish rules of vowel-centricity and consonant cluster resolution.
Definitions
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('ci'), following the general rule for words ending in vowels.
Syllables
con — Open syllable, initial syllable.. sus — Open syllable.. tan — Open syllable.. ci — Closed syllable, 'c' pronounced as /θ/ in Spain.. e — Open syllable.. mos — Closed syllable, final syllable.
Word Parts
Similar Words
Vowel-Centric Syllabification
Spanish syllables are primarily built around vowels. Each vowel typically forms the nucleus of a syllable.
Consonant Cluster Resolution
When consonant clusters occur, they are generally broken after the first consonant if a vowel follows.
Stress Placement
Stress generally falls on the second-to-last syllable if the word ends in a vowel, 'n', or 's'.
- The pronunciation of 'c' before 'i' as /θ/ (in most of Spain) or /s/ (in Latin America) doesn't affect the syllabification process.
- The linking vowel '-ci-' is a standard feature in verb conjugation.
Nearby Words
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