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Words with Suffix “--age” in French

Browse French words ending with the suffix “--age”, complete with pronunciations, syllable breakdowns, and linguistic insights.

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--age

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5 words

--age Latin *-aticum*. Forms a noun or adjective from a verb.

désavantageassiez
6 syllables17 letters
·sa·van·tage·as·siez
/de.z‿a.vɑ̃.ta.ʒ‿a.sje/
verb

The word 'désavantageassiez' is syllabified as 'dé-sa-van-tage-as-siez' based on French rules prioritizing vowel sounds and avoiding breaking consonant clusters. It's a verb form meaning 'you would disadvantage', with stress on the penultimate syllable. The morphemic breakdown reveals Latin origins in the prefix, root, and suffix.

encourageassent
7 syllables15 letters
en·cou·ra·ge·as·sen·t
/ɑ̃.ku.ʁa.ʒə.as.sɑ̃.t/
noun

The word 'encourageassent' is syllabified as en-cou-ra-ge-as-sen-t, following French rules of onset maximization and vowel cluster separation. It's a constructed noun formed from the verb 'encourager' and the root 'assent', with primary stress on the final syllable.

esclavageassiez
6 syllables15 letters
es·cla·va·ge·as·siez
/ɛskla.vaʒa.sje/
noun

The word 'esclavageassiez' is divided into six syllables: es-cla-va-ge-as-siez. It's a compound noun derived from Latin roots, with stress on the penultimate syllable. Syllabification follows standard French rules of vowel-initial division, but the word's unusual construction presents a unique case.

esclavageraient
5 syllables15 letters
es·cla·va·ge·raient
/ɛsklavɑʒʁɛt/
verb

The word 'esclavageraient' is a conditional verb form. Syllabification follows the vowel nucleus rule, dividing the word into five syllables: es-cla-va-ge-raient. The primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'ge'. The morphemic breakdown reveals Latin roots and suffixes.

verbiageassions
6 syllables15 letters
ver·bi·a·ge·as·sjons
/vɛʁ.bi.aʒ.a.sjɔ̃/
Verb

The word 'verbiageassions' is syllabified into six syllables (ver-bi-a-ge-as-sjons) following standard French CV/CVC rules. It's a verb form with stress on the final syllable, composed of Latin-derived morphemes indicating excessive speech in the first-person plural imperfect subjunctive.