déchaperonassions
Syllables
dé-cha-pe-ro-nas-sions
Pronunciation
/de.ʃa.pe.ʁɔ.na.sjɔ̃/
Stress
000001
Morphemes
dé- + chaperon- + -onnassions
The word 'déchaperonnassions' is a complex French verb form. Syllabification follows rules prioritizing vowel sounds and maintaining consonant clusters. The final syllable '-sions' receives subtle stress. The word is composed of a prefix 'dé-', root 'chaperon-', and several inflectional suffixes. The IPA transcription is /de.ʃa.pe.ʁɔ.na.sjɔ̃/.
Definitions
- 1
To be uncapping, removing the cap from (bottles), or figuratively, to be freeing from constraints.
We were uncapping / We were freeing.
“Nous déchaperonnassions les bouteilles de vin.”
Stress pattern
Stress is subtle in French. The final syllable '-sions' receives the most noticeable emphasis, but it's not as strong as in English. The stress pattern is generally 000001, indicating primary stress on the last syllable.
Syllables
dé — Open syllable, unstressed.. cha — Open syllable, unstressed.. pe — Open syllable, unstressed.. ro — Open syllable, unstressed.. nas — Closed syllable, unstressed.. sions — Closed syllable, stressed (subtle). Contains a nasal vowel.
Word Parts
Similar Words
Open Syllables
Syllables ending in a vowel are generally open.
Consonant Clusters
Consonant clusters are maintained within a syllable unless naturally separable.
Nasal Vowels
Nasal vowels form a single syllable unit.
Affix Integrity
Prefixes and suffixes are generally kept intact within a syllable.
- The imperfect subjunctive mood leads to longer verb forms.
- The nasal vowel /ɔ̃/ influences the final syllable division.
- Subtle stress pattern typical of French.
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