dépelotonnassions
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
- 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
dé — 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.
Word Parts
Similar Words
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.
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