HyphenateIt
Word Analysis

desentecharemos

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

6 syllables
15 characters
Spanish
Enriched
6syllables

desentecharemos

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

de-sen-te-cha-re-mos

Pronunciation

/desen.te.ʧa.ɾe.mos/

Stress

001001

Morphemes

des- + tech- + -aremos

The word 'desentecharemos' is a future tense verb conjugation. It is divided into six syllables: de-sen-te-cha-re-mos, with stress on the penultimate syllable. The word consists of the prefix 'des-', the root 'tech-', and the suffix '-aremos'. Syllabification follows standard Spanish rules based on vowel-consonant patterns and the treatment of consonant clusters.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    To dismantle, to unroof, to take apart (a structure).

    We will dismantle/unroof.

    Desentecharemos el viejo cobertizo.

    Desentecharemos la estructura para reutilizar los materiales.

Stress pattern

The primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('cha'), following the standard Spanish rule for words ending in vowels, 'n', or 's'.

Syllables

6
de/de/
sen/sen/
te/te/
cha/ʧa/
re/ɾe/
mos/mos/

de Open syllable, consisting of a vowel and a consonant.. sen Open syllable, consisting of a consonant, a vowel, and a consonant.. te Open syllable, consisting of a consonant and a vowel.. cha Closed syllable, consisting of a consonant cluster and a vowel.. re Open syllable, consisting of a consonant and a vowel.. mos Closed syllable, consisting of a vowel and two consonants.

Vowel-Consonant (VC)

Syllables are divided before the consonant when a vowel is followed by a consonant (e.g., de, te, re).

Consonant-Vowel-Consonant (CVC)

Syllables are divided before and after the vowel when a consonant is followed by a vowel and then another consonant (e.g., sen, mos).

Consonant Cluster

Consonant clusters are generally maintained within a syllable unless they are easily separable based on pronunciation (e.g., 'ch' in 'cha' is treated as a single unit).

Penultimate Stress

Stress falls on the penultimate syllable in words ending in vowels, 'n', or 's'.

  • The 'ch' digraph is treated as a single phoneme in Spanish, influencing syllable division.
  • The future tense ending '-aremos' is a common suffix and doesn't present any unusual syllabification challenges.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/10/2025
Open AI Chat