déconditionnais
Syllables
dé-con-di-tion-nais
Pronunciation
/de.kɔ̃.di.sjɔ.ne/]
Stress
00001
Morphemes
dé- + condition- + -nais
The word 'déconditionnais' is divided into five syllables: 'dé-con-di-tion-nais'. It consists of a prefix 'dé-', a root 'condition-', and a suffix '-nais'. Stress falls on the final syllable. Syllabification follows French rules prioritizing vowel-centered syllables and breaking consonant clusters around vowels.
Definitions
- 1
To uncondition, to free from conditioning, to break habits or preconceived notions.
To uncondition, to decondition
“Il essayait de déconditionner ses patients.”
“Ce livre m'a aidé à déconditionner mes idées préconçues.”
ant:conditionner
Stress pattern
Stress falls on the final syllable '-nais', though it is a relatively weak stress compared to languages like English. The stress pattern is typical for French verbs.
Syllables
dé — Open syllable, unstressed.. con — Nasal vowel syllable, unstressed.. di — Open syllable, unstressed.. tion — Nasal vowel syllable, unstressed.. nais — Closed syllable, stressed.
Word Parts
Open Syllables
Syllables ending in a vowel are generally open (e.g., 'dé-', 'nais').
Consonant Clusters
Consonant clusters are broken around vowels (e.g., 'con-di-').
Nasal Vowels
Nasal vowels form a single syllable unit (e.g., 'kɔ̃').
- The 'dé-' prefix follows standard syllabification rules.
- The imperfect tense suffix '-nais' is consistently treated as a single syllable.
Nearby Words
17 wordsTrending in French
Terms getting hyphenated by users right now.
- outside
- orientatrice
- vandalisera
- sufisamment
- abjures
- abjurez
- abjurer
- abjurée
- abjurât
- abjuras
- abjurai
- abjecte
- abjects
- abîmiez
- abîmons
- abîmées
- abîment
- abîmera
- abîmant
- abîmais