intermitiriamos
Syllables
in-ter-mi-ti-ri-a-mos
Pronunciation
/ˌinteɾmi.tiˈɾja.mos/
Stress
0000100
Morphemes
inter- + mit- + -ir-i-a-mos
The word 'intermitiriamos' is a Spanish verb in the conditional perfect subjunctive, meaning 'we would have interrupted'. It's divided into seven syllables: in-ter-mi-ti-ri-a-mos, with stress on 'ri'. Syllabification follows standard Spanish rules, with a trilled 'r' and a connecting vowel 'i'.
Definitions
- 1
We would have interrupted/stopped.
We would have interrupted/stopped.
“Si no hubiera habido problemas técnicos, intermitiriamos la transmisión.”
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the antepenultimate syllable 'ri'. The stress pattern follows the general rule of stressing the antepenultimate syllable in words longer than three syllables when there is no written accent.
Syllables
in — Open syllable, unstressed.. ter — Closed syllable, unstressed.. mi — Open syllable, unstressed.. ti — Open syllable, unstressed.. ri — Open syllable, primary stressed.. a — Open syllable, unstressed.. mos — Closed syllable, unstressed.
Word Parts
inter-
Latin origin, meaning 'between' or 'among', modifies verb meaning.
mit-
Latin *mittere* (to send, to let go), core meaning of the verb.
-ir-i-a-mos
Combination of infinitive ending (-ir), connecting vowel (-i-), conditional ending (-ri-), gender marker (-a-), and first-person plural ending (-mos).
Vowel + Consonant
Syllables are divided after a vowel followed by a consonant.
Consonant + Vowel
Syllables are divided between consonants and vowels.
Stress Rule
Spanish stress generally falls on the penultimate syllable, unless a written accent indicates otherwise. In this case, the stress falls on the antepenultimate syllable due to the length of the word.
- The 'rr' represents a trilled 'r' sound.
- The connecting vowel 'i' is crucial for pronunciation.
- The conditional perfect subjunctive form is complex but follows standard syllabification rules.
Nearby Words
17 wordsTrending in Spanish
Terms getting hyphenated by users right now.