déconditionnasses
Syllables
dé-con-di-tion-nas-ses
Pronunciation
/de.kɔ̃.di.sjɔ.ne.sas/
Stress
000011
Morphemes
dé- + conditionn- + -asses
The word 'déconditionnasses' is syllabified based on French rules prioritizing vowel sounds and avoiding unnecessary consonant cluster breaks. It consists of six syllables: 'dé-con-di-tion-nas-ses', with primary stress on the final syllable. The word is a verb form derived from the prefix 'dé-', the root 'conditionn-', and the suffix '-asses'.
Definitions
- 1
Conditional present, 2nd person plural of 'déconditionner'.
you would decondition
“Si vous aviez le temps, vous déconditionneriez vos habitudes.”
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the final syllable '-ses'. French stress is generally on the last syllable of a phrase.
Syllables
dé — Open syllable, stressed (weakly).. con — Closed syllable with nasal vowel.. di — Open syllable.. tion — Closed syllable with nasal vowel.. nas — Open syllable.. ses — Closed syllable, primary stress.
Word Parts
Open Syllables
Syllables ending in a vowel are generally open (e.g., 'dé-').
Consonant Clusters
Consonant clusters are kept together unless they are complex and involve a sonorant consonant (e.g., 'con-').
Vowel Sequences
Vowel sequences are generally divided into separate syllables (e.g., 'di-').
Final Consonant(s)
Final consonants are usually part of the last syllable, even in clusters (e.g., 'sses').
- The nasal vowel /ɔ̃/ doesn't affect syllabification.
- The 'ss' cluster is a common feature in French and doesn't typically lead to syllable separation.
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