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Word Analysis

emberrenchinasen

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

6 syllables
16 characters
Spanish
Enriched
6syllables

emberrent͡ʃinasen

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

em-ber-ren-t͡ʃi-na-sen

Pronunciation

/em.ber.ren.t͡ʃi.na.sen/

Stress

001000

Morphemes

em- + berr- + -en-t͡ʃi-na-sen

The word 'emberrenchinasen' is a complex Spanish verb form, likely archaic or regional. It is divided into six syllables: em-ber-ren-t͡ʃi-na-sen, with primary stress on 'ren'. The morphemic breakdown reveals a prefix 'em-', root 'berr-', and a complex suffix combination indicating aspect and person/number. The syllabification follows standard Spanish CV structure and stress rules.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    To begin to shout repeatedly; to start to roar habitually.

    They/we are beginning to shout/roar repeatedly.

    Los niños se emberrenchinasen al ver el payaso.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the third syllable ('ren'), following the general rule of penultimate stress in Spanish words ending in a vowel or 'n/s'.

Syllables

6
em/em/
ber/ber/
ren/ren/
t͡ʃi/t͡ʃi/
na/na/
sen/sen/

em Open syllable, initial syllable.. ber Closed syllable.. ren Closed syllable, primary stressed syllable.. t͡ʃi Open syllable.. na Open syllable.. sen Closed syllable, final syllable.

CV Structure

Spanish syllables generally follow a Consonant-Vowel structure.

Consonant Closure

A syllable ends when it encounters a consonant that isn't part of a permissible consonant cluster.

Digraphs

Digraphs like 'ch' are treated as single consonant units.

Stress Placement

Stress generally falls on the penultimate syllable if the word ends in a vowel, 'n', or 's'.

  • The combination of suffixes is highly unusual and suggests a non-standard verb form.
  • The word's length and complexity are exceptional.
  • The suffixes '-chi-' and '-na-' are likely archaic or regional inflectional markers.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/5/2025
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