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Word Analysis

décapuchonnerais

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

6 syllables
16 characters
French
Enriched
6syllables

capuchonnerais

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

dé-ca-pu-chon-ne-rais

Pronunciation

/de.ka.pu.ʃɔ.ne.ʁe/

Stress

000100

Morphemes

dé- + capuchon- + -ner-

The word 'décapuchonnerais' is syllabified as dé-ca-pu-chon-ne-rais, with primary stress on 'chon'. It's a verb form derived from 'décapuchonner' (to unhood) through the addition of the conditional present, first-person singular suffix '-ais'. Syllable division follows vowel-based rules and avoids stranded consonants, with the final 'r' forming its own syllable.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    To unhood, to remove a hood from something or someone.

    To unhood

    Je décapuchonnerais la statue si elle avait un capuchon.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'chon'. This is typical for French verbs.

Syllables

6
/de/
ca/ka/
pu/pu/
chon/ʃɔ̃/
ne/nə/
rais/ʁe/

Open syllable, unstressed.. ca Open syllable, unstressed.. pu Open syllable, unstressed.. chon Closed syllable, primary stressed.. ne Open syllable, unstressed.. rais Closed syllable, unstressed.

Vowel-Based Division

Syllables are generally formed around vowel sounds.

Avoid Stranded Consonants

Consonants are not left alone to begin a syllable unless they are part of a consonant cluster.

Consonant Cluster Treatment

"ch" is treated as a single phoneme, simplifying the syllable structure.

Final 'r' Rule

The final 'r' is vocalized and forms its own syllable.

  • The vocalization of the final 'r' is a key feature of French pronunciation and affects syllable division.
  • The 'ch' consonant cluster is treated as a single unit for syllabification purposes.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/8/2025

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