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Word Analysis

contusionnerait

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

5 syllables
15 characters
French
Enriched
5syllables

contusionnerait

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

con-tu-sion-ne-rait

Pronunciation

/kɔ̃.ty.zjɔ.nɛ.ʁe/

Stress

00100

Morphemes

con- + tusion- + -nerait

The word 'contusionnerait' is divided into five syllables: con-tu-sion-ne-rait. It's a verb in the conditional mood, derived from Latin roots. Stress falls on the penultimate syllable. Syllabification follows standard French rules of vowel separation and consonant cluster preservation.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    To bruise, to injure (in a way that causes bruising).

    Would bruise, would injure.

    Il se contusionnerait facilement en jouant au rugby.

Stress pattern

The primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('sion').

Syllables

5
con/kɔ̃/
tu/ty/
sion/zjɔ̃/
ne/nɛ/
rait/ʁe/

con Open syllable, nasal vowel. Contains the prefix.. tu Open syllable, vowel followed by a consonant. Part of the root.. sion Closed syllable, nasal vowel. Part of the root.. ne Open syllable, vowel followed by a consonant. Part of the suffix.. rait Closed syllable, vowel followed by a consonant. Contains the conditional ending.

Vowel-Consonant-Vowel (VCV)

Syllables are generally divided between vowels, as seen in 'tu-sion'.

Consonant Clusters

Consonant clusters are kept together within a syllable, like 'sion'.

Nasal Vowels

Nasal vowels form their own syllable, as in 'con-'.

Final Consonant

A single final consonant typically belongs to the preceding syllable, as in 'ne-rait'.

  • The placement of 't' in 'tu' is governed by avoiding single consonants between vowels and keeping consonant clusters together.
  • French syllabification prioritizes vowel separation, but also avoids leaving single consonants isolated.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/10/2025

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