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Word Analysis

dépelotonnassions

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

6 syllables
17 characters
French
Enriched
6syllables

pelotonnassions

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

dé-pe-lo-ton-nas-sions

Pronunciation

/de.pe.lɔ.tɔ.nas.sjɔ̃/

Stress

000001

Morphemes

dé- + peloton- + -nassions

The word 'dépelotonnassions' is a French verb form divided into six syllables: dé-pe-lo-ton-nas-sions. It follows standard French syllabification rules based on vowel nuclei and consonant cluster maintenance. Stress falls on the final syllable. The word is morphologically complex, comprising a prefix, root, and suffix, all with Latin origins.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    We were smoothing, rolling, or de-bobbling.

    We were smoothing/rolling/de-bobbling

    Si nous avions plus de temps, nous dépelotonnassions les pulls.

Stress pattern

Stress falls on the last syllable, '-sions', which is typical for French verbs.

Syllables

6
/de/
pe/pə/
lo/lɔ/
ton/tɔ̃/
nas/nas/
sions/sjɔ̃/

Open syllable, unstressed.. pe Open syllable, unstressed.. lo Open syllable, unstressed.. ton Closed syllable, nasal vowel, unstressed.. nas Closed syllable, unstressed.. sions Closed syllable, nasal vowel, stressed.

Vowel Nucleus Rule

Syllables are formed around vowel sounds. Each syllable contains one vowel (or diphthong).

Consonant Cluster Rule

Consonant clusters are maintained within a syllable unless they are easily separable based on pronunciation.

Nasal Vowel Rule

Nasal vowels form the nucleus of a syllable.

  • The 'lt' cluster in 'peloton' is treated as a single unit within a syllable, common in French.
  • Regional variations in vowel quality or nasalization may exist, but do not alter the syllable division.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/7/2025

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