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Word Analysis

décapuchonnassiez

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

6 syllables
17 characters
French
Enriched
6syllables

capuchonassiez

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

dé-ca-pu-cho-nas-siez

Pronunciation

/de.ka.pu.ʃɔ.na.sje/

Stress

000001

Morphemes

dé- + capuchon- + -nassiez

The word 'décapuchonnassiez' is a verb form divided into six syllables: dé-ca-pu-cho-nas-siez. Syllabification follows the vowel nucleus rule and avoids breaking consonant clusters. Stress falls on the final syllable. The word is composed of the prefix 'dé-', the root 'capuchon-', and the complex suffix '-nassiez'.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    You (plural) were unhooding / You (plural) would unhood.

    You (plural) were unhooding / You (plural) would unhood.

    Si vous aviez froid, vous vous décapuchonnassiez pour vous protéger.

Stress pattern

Stress falls on the final syllable '-siez', as is typical in French.

Syllables

6
/de/
ca/ka/
pu/pu/
cho/ʃɔ/
nas/na/
siez/sje/

Open syllable, no consonant clusters.. ca Open syllable, no consonant clusters.. pu Open syllable, no consonant clusters.. cho Open syllable, 'ch' treated as a single phoneme.. nas Open syllable, no consonant clusters.. siez Open syllable, inflectional ending.

Vowel Nucleus Rule

Syllables are formed around vowel sounds. Each syllable contains one vowel sound.

Consonant Cluster Rule

Consonant clusters are generally not broken unless they are complex and involve a sonorant consonant.

Phoneme Treatment

Certain consonant combinations (like 'ch') are treated as single phonemes and not broken into separate syllables.

  • The 'ch' in 'cho-' is treated as a single phoneme.
  • The nasal vowel in 'nas-' is a typical feature of French syllabification.
  • French stress is generally on the final syllable.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/7/2025

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