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Words with Root “bot-” in French

Browse French words sharing the root “bot-”, complete with pronunciations, syllable breakdowns, and linguistic insights.

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bot-

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5 words

bot- From *bouter* (to bottle), ultimately from Latin *butis*.

embottelassions
5 syllables15 letters
em·bot·te·las·sions
/ɑ̃.bɔ.tə.las.jɔ̃/
verb

The word 'embottelassions' is syllabified as em-bot-te-las-sions, with stress on 'las'. It's the first-person plural imperfect subjunctive of 'embouteiller', formed from a Latin prefix, root, and French inflectional suffixes. Syllabification follows standard French rules of maximizing onsets and penultimate stress.

embottelleraient
5 syllables16 letters
em·bot·tel·le·raient
/ɑ̃.bɔ.tɛ.lʁe.tʁɛ/
verb

The French verb 'embottelleraient' (they would bottle) is syllabified as em-bot-tel-le-raient, with stress on the final syllable. Its structure reflects Latin origins and complex verb conjugation, adhering to French syllabification rules based on vowel nuclei and consonant clusters.

embottellerions
5 syllables15 letters
em·bot·tel·le·rions
/ɑ̃.bɔ.tə.lje.ʁɔ̃/
verb

The word 'embottellerions' is syllabified as em-bot-tel-le-rions, with stress on the final syllable. It's a verb formed from the prefix 'em-', the root 'bot-', and the suffix '-ellerions'. Syllable division follows standard French C-V rules and maximizing onsets.

robotisassions
5 syllables14 letters
ro·bo·ti·sas·sions
/ʁɔ.bɔ.ti.zas.jɔ̃/
verb

The word 'robotisassions' is a complex French verb form. It is syllabified as ro-bo-ti-sas-sions, with stress on the final syllable '-sions'. It is composed of a Latin-derived prefix and root, along with inflectional suffixes indicating person, number, and mood. Syllabification follows standard French rules of vowel-consonant separation.

robotiseraient
5 syllables14 letters
ro·bo·ti·se·raient
/ʁɔ.bɔ.ti.zɛ.ʁɛ/
verb

The French verb 'robotiseraient' (would robotize) is divided into five syllables: ro-bo-ti-se-raient, with stress on the penultimate syllable. Syllabification follows vowel-consonant patterns and avoids single intervocalic consonants, consistent with French phonological rules.