desgarrancharan
Syllables
des-ga-rran-cha-ran
Pronunciation
/des.ɡa.ran.ˈt͡ʃa.ɾan/
Stress
00001
Morphemes
des- + garr- + -anchar
Desgarrancharan is a Spanish verb meaning 'to tear roughly'. It's syllabified as des-ga-rran-cha-ran, stressed on the penultimate syllable. It's formed from the prefix 'des-', root 'garr-', and suffix '-anchar', following standard Spanish syllabification rules.
Definitions
Stress pattern
The primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('ra' in 'gar-ran-cha-ran'). This is consistent with Spanish stress rules for words ending in a consonant other than 'n' or 's'.
Syllables
des — Open syllable, unstressed.. ga — Open syllable, unstressed.. rran — Closed syllable, unstressed.. cha — Open syllable, unstressed.. ran — Closed syllable, stressed.
Word Parts
Vowel Separation
Syllables are separated by vowels (e.g., de-ga).
Consonant Cluster Separation
Consonant clusters are split according to pronounceability (e.g., ga-rran).
Penultimate Stress
Words ending in consonants other than 'n' or 's' are stressed on the penultimate syllable.
- The 'ch' digraph is treated as a single unit.
- The 'rr' is treated as a single unit.
- The word is relatively uncommon, so regional variations are unlikely.
Nearby Words
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