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Word Analysis

constitutionnalisas

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

7 syllables
19 characters
French
Enriched
7syllables

constitutionnalisas

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

con-sti-tu-tion-na-li-sas

Pronunciation

/kɔ̃.sti.ty.sjɔ̃.na.li.za/

Stress

0100101

Morphemes

consti- + tution- + -nel-

The word 'constitutionnalisas' is divided into seven syllables based on vowel sounds and French syllabification rules. It's a verb form derived from 'constitutionnel' with a primary stress on the penultimate syllable. The morphemic analysis reveals Latin roots and French suffixes. Syllable division is consistent with similar French words.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    3rd person plural present indicative of the verb *constituer* (to constitute, to form, to establish).

    They constitute / They form / They establish.

    Ces éléments constitutionnalisas un nouveau gouvernement.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('tion'). French stress is generally on the final syllable of a phrase or group, but in longer words, it tends to recede towards the penultimate syllable.

Syllables

7
con/kɔ̃/
sti/sti/
tu/ty/
tion/sjɔ̃/
na/na/
li/li/
sas/za/

con Open syllable, nasal vowel.. sti Closed syllable, consonant cluster.. tu Open syllable, palatalized consonant.. tion Closed syllable, nasal vowel, common French syllable.. na Open syllable.. li Open syllable.. sas Closed syllable, verbal inflection.

Vowel Rule

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

Consonant Cluster Rule

Consonant clusters are often split based on sonority, but French tends to avoid splitting clusters if possible, especially when they are pronounceable as a unit.

Avoid Stranded Consonants

French syllabification avoids leaving a single consonant at the beginning of a syllable unless it's part of a consonant cluster.

  • The 'tion' syllable is a common and stable unit in French syllabification.
  • The nasal vowels (ɔ̃, ɑ̃) do not significantly alter the syllable division process.
  • The word is a conjugated verb form, which doesn't change the basic syllabification rules.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/6/2025

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