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Word Analysis

authentifieriez

Complete linguistic analysis including syllable division, pronunciation, morphology, and definitions.

5 syllables
15 characters
French
Enriched
5syllables

authentifieriez

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

au-then-ti-fie-riez

Pronunciation

/ɔ̃.tɑ̃.ti.fje.ʁie/

Stress

00001

Morphemes

au- + thent- + -ifier-

The word 'authentifieriez' is divided into five syllables: au-then-ti-fie-riez. The stress falls on the final syllable '-riez'. It's a verb form derived from Latin and Greek roots, meaning 'would authenticate'. Syllabification follows standard French rules prioritizing vowel sounds and avoiding unnecessary consonant cluster breaks.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    To authenticate, to verify the genuineness of something.

    Would authenticate

    Si vous pouviez authentifier ces documents, ce serait formidable.

Stress pattern

The primary stress falls on the final syllable '-riez', as is typical in French. The other syllables are unstressed.

Syllables

5
au/ɔ̃/
then/tɑ̃/
ti/ti/
fie/fje/
riez/ʁie/

au Open syllable, containing a nasal vowel. The 'u' is pronounced as /ɔ̃/ due to nasalization.. then Open syllable, containing a nasal vowel. The 'th' is pronounced as /t/ followed by a nasal vowel /ɑ̃/.. ti Open syllable, containing a closed vowel /i/.. fie Closed syllable, containing a glide /j/ after the consonant /f/. The 'ie' forms a diphthong.. riez Closed syllable, containing the stressed vowel /i/. The 'r' is a uvular fricative /ʁ/.

Vowel Grouping

Syllables are formed around vowel sounds. Each vowel sound generally forms the nucleus of a syllable.

Consonant Cluster Avoidance

Consonant clusters are generally not broken unless they are complex or create pronunciation difficulties.

Final Syllable Stress

In French, stress typically falls on the final syllable of a phrase or breath group.

  • The 't' between 'au' and 'thent' could have been a potential syllable break, but French syllabification prefers to keep it with the following vowel.
  • The 'f' in 'ifier' is part of the syllable 'fje' due to the glide /j/.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/10/2025

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