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Words with Suffix “-ront” in French

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

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-ront

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5 words

-ront Latin origin. Future tense ending for the third-person plural (ils/elles).

boustifailleront
5 syllables16 letters
bous·ti·fail·le·ront
/bus.ti.faj.ʁɔ̃/
verb

The word 'boustifailleront' is a future tense verb form divided into five syllables: bous-ti-fail-le-ront. The stress falls on the final syllable '-ront'. The word's structure reflects typical French syllabification rules, prioritizing vowel sounds and preserving consonant clusters. It's a colloquial verb meaning 'to mess around'.

dépaisselleront
6 syllables15 letters
·pa·is·se·lle·ront
/de.pɛ.se.lɛ.ʁɔ̃/
verb

The word 'dépaisselleront' is a future tense verb form. Syllabification follows French rules, prioritizing vowel sounds and avoiding consonant cluster splits. Stress falls on the final syllable. The word is composed of a prefix 'dé-', root 'paisser', and suffix '-ront'.

fanfrelucheront
5 syllables15 letters
fan·frel·u·che·ront
/fɑ̃.fʁœ.ly.ʃe.ʁɔ̃/
verb

The word 'fanfrelucheront' is syllabified as fan-frel-u-che-ront, following French rules prioritizing open syllables and resolving consonant clusters. It's the future tense, third-person plural of 'fanfreluche', meaning 'to trifle'. Stress falls on the final syllable '-ront'.

retransmettront
4 syllables15 letters
re·trans·met·tront
/ʁə.tʁɑ̃s.mɛt.ʁɔ̃/
verb

The word 'retransmettront' is divided into four syllables: re-trans-met-tront. It consists of the prefix 're-', the root 'transmettre', and the future tense suffix '-ront'. Stress falls on the final syllable. Syllabification follows vowel-based division and preserves consonant clusters.

tranchefileront
5 syllables15 letters
tran·che·fi·le·ront
/tʁɑ̃ʃ.fi.lɛ.ʁɔ̃/
verb

The word 'tranchefileront' is a future tense verb form divided into five syllables: tran-che-fi-le-ront. Stress falls on the final syllable '-ront'. The syllabification follows vowel-based division rules, keeping consonant clusters intact. It's a complex verb with roots in Old French and Latin.