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Words with Root “ifi-” in French

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

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Root

ifi-

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5 words

ifi- From Latin *facere* - to make, do

quantifiassent
5 syllables14 letters
quan·ti·fi·as·sent
/kɑ̃.ti.fjas/
verb

The word 'quantifiassent' is divided into five syllables: quan-ti-fi-as-sent. It's a verb form with Latin roots, and stress falls on the penultimate syllable. Syllable division follows standard French rules of maximizing onsets and respecting vowel sequences.

quantifiassiez
5 syllables14 letters
quan·ti·fi·as·siez
/kɑ̃.ti.fjas.je/
Verb

The word 'quantifiassiez' is divided into five syllables: quan-ti-fi-as-siez. It's a verb form (imperfect subjunctive) derived from Latin roots. Syllabification follows the vowel nucleus and maximize onset rules. Stress is subtle, falling on the final syllable.

quantifiassions
5 syllables15 letters
quan·ti·fi·as·sions
/kɑ̃.ti.fi.ˈsjɔ̃/
verb

The word 'quantifiassions' is divided into five syllables: quan-ti-fi-as-sions. It is the first-person plural imperfect subjunctive of 'quantifier', with stress on the final syllable '-sions'. The syllabification follows standard French rules prioritizing vowel sounds and maintaining consonant clusters.

saccharifiasse
6 syllables14 letters
sa·ca·rri·fi·as·se
/sakaʁifi.jas/
noun

The word 'saccharifiasse' is divided into six syllables: sa-ca-rri-fi-as-se. The primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'fi'. It's morphologically composed of the prefix 'sacchar-', the root 'ifi-', and the suffix '-asse'. The syllabification follows standard French rules prioritizing vowel sounds and treating consonant clusters like 'fr' as single units.

simplifiassiez
5 syllables14 letters
sim·pli·fi·as·siez
/sɛ̃.pli.fi.as.je/
Verb

The word 'simplifiassiez' is divided into five syllables: sim-pli-fi-as-siez. It's a verb in the imperfect subjunctive mood, with stress on the final syllable. Syllabification follows the rules of vowel-based nuclei and consonant closure, with consideration for the nasal vowel and the complex suffix.