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Word Analysis

authentifierions

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

5 syllables
16 characters
French
Enriched
5syllables

authentifierions

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

au-then-ti-fie-rions

Pronunciation

/ɔ̃.tɑ̃.ti.fje.ʁjɔ̃/

Stress

00001

Morphemes

au- + thent- + -ifierions

The word 'authentifierions' is a first-person plural conditional present tense verb form. It is divided into five syllables: au-then-ti-fie-rions, with stress on the final syllable '-rions'. The syllabification follows French rules prioritizing vowel sounds and avoiding unnecessary consonant breaks. The word's morphemic structure reveals Latin and Greek origins, and its pronunciation includes nasal vowels and a uvular 'r'.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    To authenticate, to verify the genuineness of something.

    We would authenticate.

    Nous authentifierions ces documents si nous avions le temps.

Stress pattern

Stress falls on the final syllable '-rions', which is typical for French words. The stress is primary (1).

Syllables

5
au/õ/
then/tɑ̃/
ti/ti/
fie/fje/
rions/ʁjɔ̃/

au Open syllable, nasal vowel. Syllable begins the word.. then Open syllable, nasal vowel. Follows the initial syllable.. ti Open syllable, vowel followed by consonant.. fie Open syllable, vowel followed by consonant.. rions Closed syllable, nasal vowel, stressed syllable.

Open Syllables

Syllables ending in a vowel are generally open, creating separate syllables (e.g., au-, ti-, fier-).

Consonant Clusters

Consonant clusters are maintained within a syllable unless pronunciation is difficult (e.g., -tifier-).

Nasal Vowels

Nasal vowels form syllable nuclei, creating distinct syllables (e.g., -tɑ̃-, -fje-).

Final Syllable Stress

Stress typically falls on the final syllable of the word.

  • The presence of nasal vowels requires careful consideration as syllable nuclei.
  • The 'r' sound is a uvular fricative, influencing pronunciation but not significantly altering syllabification.
  • The word is exclusively a verb form, so syllabification does not shift based on grammatical function.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/8/2025

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