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Words with Suffix “-illerions” in French

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

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-illerions

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5 words

-illerions Verbal suffix '-iller-' (causative/iterative) + first-person plural present indicative '-ions'

croustillerions
4 syllables15 letters
crou·stil·le·rions
/kʁustijeʁ.jɔ̃/
verb

The word 'croustillerions' is divided into four syllables: crou-stil-le-rions. It's the first-person plural present indicative of 'croustiller', meaning 'we would crunch'. The stress falls on the third syllable. Syllabification follows French rules of maximizing onsets and avoiding stranded consonants.

gargouillerions
5 syllables15 letters
gar·gou·il·ler·ions
/ɡaʁ.ɡu.je.ʁjɔ̃/
verb

The word 'gargouillerions' is syllabified as gar-gou-il-ler-ions, with stress on 'ler'. It's a verb in the conditional mood, first-person plural, formed from the root 'gargou-' and suffixes '-iller-' and '-ions'. Syllabification follows standard French rules.

gribouillerions
4 syllables15 letters
gri·bou·je·rions
/ɡʁi.bu.je.ʁjɔ̃/
verb

The word 'gribouillerions' is a verb form divided into four syllables: gri-bou-je-rions. Stress falls on the final syllable '-rions'. The syllabification follows vowel-based division rules, respecting morpheme boundaries and consonant clusters. It's the first-person plural conditional of 'gribouiller', meaning 'we would scribble'.

mâchouillerions
5 syllables15 letters
·chou·il·le·rions
/ma.ʃu.je.ʁjɔ̃/
verb

The word 'mâchouillerions' is a verb form divided into five syllables: mâ-chou-il-le-rions. Stress falls on the final syllable. The morphemic structure consists of a Latin-derived root 'mâchou-' and a conditional suffix '-illerions'. Syllabification follows standard French rules prioritizing vowel sounds and avoiding breaks within diphthongs.

tournillerions
5 syllables14 letters
tou·rni·lle·ri·ons
/tuʁ.ni.je.ʁjɔ̃/
verb

The word 'tournillerions' is syllabified as tou-rni-lle-ri-ons, with stress on the final syllable. It's the conditional present, 1st person plural of 'tourniller', meaning 'we would turn'. Syllabification follows standard French rules, maximizing onsets and adhering to the open syllable principle.