dégoupillerions
Syllables
dé-gou-pil-le-rions
Pronunciation
/de.ɡu.pi.je.ʁjɔ̃/
Stress
00001
Morphemes
dé- + goupille- + -erions
The word 'dégoupillerions' is a conditional verb form divided into five syllables: dé-gou-pil-le-rions. It consists of the prefix 'dé-', the root 'goupille-', and the suffix '-erions'. Stress falls on the final syllable. Syllabification follows French rules prioritizing vowel sounds and avoiding unnecessary consonant breaks.
Definitions
Stress pattern
Stress falls on the last syllable, 'rions'.
Syllables
dé — Open syllable, unstressed.. gou — Open syllable, unstressed.. pil — Closed syllable, unstressed.. le — Open syllable, unstressed.. rions — Closed syllable, stressed, contains a nasal vowel.
Word Parts
dé-
Latin origin, meaning 'reversal, removal, undoing'. Prefix indicating reversal or completion of the action.
goupille-
Origin uncertain, possibly from Old French 'goupille' meaning 'pin'. Root denoting the object being acted upon (a pin).
-erions
Latin/Romance origin, from infinitive '-er' + conditional ending '-ions'. Indicates conditional mood, first-person plural.
Similar Words
Open Syllables
Syllables ending in a vowel are generally open.
Consonant Clusters
Consonant clusters are kept together unless they can be easily separated by a vowel sound.
Nasal Vowels
Nasal vowels form a single syllable.
Final Syllable Stress
Stress falls on the final syllable.
- The 'ill' sequence is treated as a single syllable, even though it contains two letters.
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