HyphenateIt
Word Analysis

jeremiqueariais

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

6 syllables
15 characters
Spanish
Enriched
6syllables

jeremiquearais

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

je-re-mi-que-a-rais

Pronunciation

/xe.ɾe.mi.ke.a.ˈɾais/

Stress

000010

Morphemes

jeremi + quearais

The word 'jeremiqueariais' is a verb form with six syllables divided according to CV structure. Stress falls on the penultimate syllable. It's morphologically complex, derived from 'jeremi-' (lamentation) with verbal and inflectional suffixes. Syllabification follows standard Spanish rules.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    To complain habitually, to whine, to lament continuously.

    To whine, to moan, to complain incessantly.

    Si supieran lo que sufría, no me pedirían que jeremiquearais tanto.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('a' in 'rais'), following the general rule for words ending in vowels (excluding 'n' or 's').

Syllables

6
je/xe/
re/ɾe/
mi/mi/
que/ke/
a/a/
rais/ɾais/

je Open syllable, initial consonant cluster.. re Open syllable.. mi Open syllable.. que Closed syllable.. a Open syllable, vowel alone.. rais Closed syllable.

Consonant-Vowel (CV)

Syllables are typically formed around a vowel, with any preceding consonants belonging to that syllable.

Vowel Alone

A single vowel constitutes a syllable.

Digraph 'qu'

The digraph 'qu' is treated as a single consonant sound before 'e' and 'i'.

  • The word's length and complex morphology. Potential regional variations in the pronunciation of /ɾ/.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/8/2025
Open AI Chat