HyphenateIt
Word Analysis

démissionnassiez

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

5 syllables
16 characters
French
Enriched
5syllables

missionnassiez

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

dé-mis-sion-nas-siez

Pronunciation

/de.mi.sjo.na.sje/

Stress

00001

Morphemes

dé- + mission- + -nner-ass-iez

The word 'démissionnassiez' is a complex verb form syllabified into five syllables: dé-mis-sion-nas-siez. It follows French syllabification rules prioritizing vowel sounds and maintaining consonant clusters. Stress falls on the final syllable. The word's morphemic structure reveals Latin origins and a complex verbal conjugation.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    Imperfect subjunctive of 'démissionner'.

    You (plural) would resign.

    Si vous aviez des raisons valables, vous démissionnassiez.

Stress pattern

The primary stress falls on the final syllable, '-siez', as is typical in French. The stress is relatively weak compared to languages like English.

Syllables

5
/de/
mis/mi/
sion/sjõ/
nas/na/
siez/sje/

Open syllable, containing the prefix. Unstressed.. mis Open syllable, part of the root. Unstressed.. sion Closed syllable, containing a nasal vowel. Unstressed.. nas Open syllable, part of the imperfect subjunctive marker. Unstressed.. siez Closed syllable, containing the imperfect subjunctive ending. Stressed.

Vowel-Based Division

Syllables are formed around vowel sounds, creating open or closed syllables.

Consonant Cluster Handling

Consonant clusters are maintained within a syllable unless a vowel sound naturally separates them.

Nasal Vowel Influence

Nasal vowels attract preceding consonants into the same syllable.

Final Syllable Stress

Stress typically falls on the final syllable in French words.

  • The imperfect subjunctive ending '-iez' is crucial for syllable division.
  • The 'n' in 'missionn-' is part of the syllable due to the nasal vowel.
  • Consonant clusters like '-ss-' are treated as a single unit within a syllable.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/8/2025

Trending in French

Terms getting hyphenated by users right now.

Open AI Chat