HyphenateIt
Word Analysis

pachangueariais

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

6 syllables
15 characters
Spanish
Enriched
6syllables

pachangueariais

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

pa-chan-gue-a-ria-is

Pronunciation

/pa.tʃaŋ.ɡe.a.ˈɾja.is/

Stress

000011

Morphemes

pachan- + -guear-ia-is

The word 'pachangueariais' is a Spanish verb form divided into six syllables: pa-chan-gue-a-ria-is. The stress falls on the penultimate syllable. The morphemic structure includes a root 'pachan-' and a complex suffix indicating conditional tense and first-person plural. Syllabification follows standard Spanish rules of vowel and consonant division.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    Conditional form of 'pachanguear'.

    We would party / We would have a good time.

    Si tuviéramos tiempo, pachanguearíamos.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('ria').

Syllables

6
pa/pa/
chan/tʃan/
gue/ɡe/
a/a/
ria/ɾja/
is/is/

pa Open syllable, consonant-vowel.. chan Open syllable, consonant cluster followed by vowel.. gue Open syllable, 'u' is silent, 'g' is soft.. a Open syllable, single vowel.. ria Closed syllable, consonant-vowel-consonant.. is Closed syllable, consonant-vowel.

Open Syllable Rule

Vowels generally form their own syllables.

Closed Syllable Rule

A consonant following a vowel closes the syllable.

Consonant Cluster Rule

Consonant clusters are broken based on sonority, but digraphs are treated as single units.

Silent Vowel Rule

Silent vowels do not affect syllabification.

  • The silent 'u' in 'gue' is a common orthographic exception.
  • The 'ng' cluster is treated as a single unit.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/8/2025
Open AI Chat