destartalaramos
Syllables
des-tar-ta-la-ra-mos
Pronunciation
/des.taɾ.ta.laˈɾa.mos/
Stress
000010
Morphemes
des- + tartal- + -ar-amos
The word 'destartalaramos' is a conjugated Spanish verb. It is divided into six syllables: des-tar-ta-la-ra-mos. The stress falls on the penultimate syllable. It consists of the prefix 'des-', the root 'tartal-', and the suffixes '-ar-' and '-amos'. Syllabification follows standard Spanish CV and consonant cluster rules.
Definitions
- 1
To remove plaster or whitewash; to strip plaster from.
To de-plaster, to strip plaster.
“Nosotros destartalamos las paredes antes de pintar.”
“Destartalaron la fachada del edificio.”
Stress pattern
The primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('ra'), following the standard Spanish rule for words ending in vowels.
Syllables
des — Open syllable, consonant-vowel.. tar — Closed syllable, consonant-vowel-consonant.. ta — Open syllable, consonant-vowel.. la — Open syllable, consonant-vowel.. ra — Open syllable, consonant-vowel.. mos — Closed syllable, vowel-consonant-consonant.
Word Parts
des-
Latin origin, meaning 'reversal, undoing'. Negation/reversal function.
tartal-
Likely of pre-Roman Iberian origin, relating to plaster or whitewash. Core meaning of the verb.
-ar-amos
Latin origin. '-ar' is the infinitive verb ending, '-amos' is the first-person plural present indicative ending. Indicates verb form, person, and tense.
CV Syllable Rule
Consonant-vowel combinations generally form a syllable.
Consonant Cluster Rule
Consonant clusters are maintained within a syllable unless they violate sonority principles.
Penultimate Stress Rule
Words ending in vowels, 'n', or 's' are stressed on the penultimate syllable.
- The 'r' sound is a tap/flap in Spanish, influencing the syllable structure.
- The word's length and complex morphology require careful application of syllabification rules.
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