descarretillaria
Syllables
des-ca-rre-ti-lla-ria
Pronunciation
/des.ka.re.ti.ʎa.ɾi.a/
Stress
000100
Morphemes
des- + carretilla + -ar/-ía
The word 'descarretillaria' is a Spanish verb in the conditional mood, meaning 'would unload (from a wheelbarrow)'. It's divided into six syllables: des-ca-rre-ti-lla-ria, with stress on the 'ti' syllable. The word's structure includes a prefix, root, and suffixes, following standard Spanish syllabification rules.
Definitions
Stress pattern
The primary stress falls on the fourth syllable, 'ti', as indicated by the written accent mark. This is the penultimate syllable.
Syllables
des — Open syllable, unstressed.. ca — Open syllable, unstressed.. rre — Open syllable, unstressed.. ti — Closed syllable, stressed.. lla — Open syllable, unstressed.. ria — Open syllable, unstressed.
Word Parts
Similar Words
Vowel Separation
Vowels between consonants are separated into distinct syllables.
Consonant Cluster Separation
Consonant clusters are split based on pronounceability.
Diphthong/Triphthong Rule
Diphthongs and triphthongs remain together within a single syllable.
Accentuation Rule
The written accent mark dictates the stressed syllable and influences syllable division.
- The 'll' digraph represents a single phoneme /ʎ/.
- The 'rr' digraph represents a trilled 'r' sound /r/.
Nearby Words
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