Words with Root “vit-” in French
Browse French words sharing the root “vit-”, complete with pronunciations, syllable breakdowns, and linguistic insights.
Total Words
13
Root
vit-
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13 words
vit- From Latin *vītae* (life). Core meaning related to sustenance.
The word 'ravitaillaient' is syllabified as ra-vi-tail-lai-ent, following French phonological rules of onset maximization and vowel break. It's the imperfect indicative of 'ravitailler', meaning 'were replenishing'. Stress is weak, falling on the final syllable. The morphemic structure reveals Latin origins in the prefix, root, and suffixes.
The word 'ravitaillassent' is a verb in the imperfect subjunctive, third-person plural. It's syllabified as ra-vi-tai-llas-sent, with stress on the final syllable. The word is composed of the prefix 're-', the root 'vit-', and the suffixes '-aill-', '-ass-', and '-ent'. Syllabification follows French rules prioritizing vowel sounds and avoiding unnecessary consonant cluster breaks.
The word 'ravitaillasses' is syllabified as ra-vi-tail-las-ses, following French phonological rules of maximizing onsets and treating vowel clusters as single syllables. It's the third-person plural imperfect indicative of 'ravitailler' (to supply).
The word 'ravitaillassiez' is a verb form (imperfect subjunctive) divided into five syllables: ra-vi-tai-jas-siez. Syllable division follows vowel-based rules, with consonant clusters maintained within syllables. Stress falls on the final syllable. The word is morphologically complex, with a prefix, root, and multiple suffixes.
The word 'ravitaillassions' is divided into five syllables: ra-vi-tai-jas-sions. Stress falls on the final syllable. The syllabification follows French rules prioritizing vowel sounds and maintaining consonant clusters. The word is a verb in the imperfect subjunctive, first-person plural, meaning 'we were supplying'.
The word 'ravitaillerais' is syllabified as ra-vi-tai-lle-rais, with stress on the final syllable 'rais'. It's a verb form derived from the root 'vit-' (life) with the prefix 're-' and the conditional ending '-erais'. Syllabification follows French rules of onset maximization and vowel break.
The French verb 'ravitaillerait' (would resupply) is divided into five syllables: ra-vi-tai-lle-rait, with stress on the final syllable. It's morphologically complex, built from a prefix, root, and suffixes, and its syllabification follows standard French rules.
The word 'ravitailleriez' is a verb form divided into five syllables: ra-vi-tai-lle-riez. Stress falls on the final syllable. The morphemic structure includes the prefix 're-', root 'vit-', and the suffix '-ailleriez'. Syllabification follows rules of onset maximization and vowel cluster resolution.
The word 'ravitaillerions' is a first-person plural conditional verb form. Syllabification follows vowel-based division, resulting in 'ra-vi-tai-lle-rions'. Stress falls on the final syllable '-rions'. The word is morphologically composed of the prefix 're-', the root 'vit-', and the suffix '-ailler-ions'.
The French verb 'ravitaillerons' (we will resupply) is divided into ra-vi-tai-lle-rons, with stress on 'lle'. Syllabification follows onset maximization and vowel separation rules. It's a future tense form derived from the verb 'ravitailler'.
The word 'ravitailleront' is divided into five syllables: ra-vi-tai-lle-ront. It's a verb form composed of the prefix 're-', the root 'vit-', the suffix '-ailler', and the future tense ending '-ont'. Stress falls on the final syllable. Syllabification follows rules of onset maximization and vowel cluster treatment.
The word 'ravitaillèrent' is divided into five syllables: ra-vi-tail-lè-rent. The stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'lè'. It's a verb form derived from the root 'vit-' (life) with prefixes and suffixes indicating iterative action and past tense. Syllabification follows onset maximization and vowel cluster resolution rules.
The word 'réinvitassions' is divided into five syllables: ré-in-vi-ta-ssions. It consists of the prefix 're-', the root 'vit-', and the suffix '-assions'. Stress falls on the final syllable. Syllabification follows French rules prioritizing vowel sounds and maintaining consonant clusters where pronounceable.