trasmochariamos
Syllables
tras-mo-cha-ria-mos
Pronunciation
/tras.mo.tʃa.ɾja.mos/
Stress
00100
Morphemes
tras + moch + ar-i-a-mos
The word 'trasmochariamos' is a Spanish verb form (conditional perfect subjunctive) divided into five syllables: tras-mo-cha-ria-mos. Stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'ria'. It's morphologically complex, composed of a prefix 'tras-', root 'moch-', and multiple suffixes indicating tense, mood, and person. Syllabification follows standard Spanish rules of vowel separation, consonant cluster handling, and stress placement.
Definitions
- 1
We would have pruned/curtailed/shortened.
We would have pruned/curtailed/shortened.
“Si tuviéramos más tiempo, trasmochariamos las ramas del árbol.”
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'ria' (third syllable from the end). The stress pattern is typical for Spanish words ending in vowels.
Syllables
tras — Open syllable, initial consonant cluster.. mo — Open syllable.. cha — Open syllable, 'ch' as a single phoneme.. ria — Open syllable, tapped 'r' between vowels, stressed syllable.. mos — Closed syllable, final consonant.
Word Parts
tras
Latin *trans-* meaning 'across, over, through'. Preposition/prefix indicating change or movement.
moch
From *mochar* (to prune, to cut short). Origin uncertain, possibly pre-Roman Iberian. Verb stem.
ar-i-a-mos
Combination of infinitive ending *-ar-*, conditional tense marker *-i-*, subjunctive mood marker *-a-*, and first-person plural ending *-mos*. Latin origins.
Similar Words
Vowel Separation
Vowels are generally separated into different syllables.
Consonant Cluster Separation
Consonant clusters are split according to phonotactic constraints.
Penultimate Stress
Words ending in vowels, 'n', or 's' are stressed on the penultimate syllable unless otherwise marked.
'ch' as a Unit
The digraph 'ch' is treated as a single phoneme and remains within the same syllable.
- The combination of multiple suffixes creates a complex word structure, but each suffix is treated as a separate unit for syllabification.
- The conditional perfect subjunctive is a relatively uncommon tense, but the syllabification follows standard rules.
Nearby Words
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