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Word Analysis

dépersonnalisée

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

6 syllables
15 characters
French
Enriched
6syllables

personnalisée

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

dé-per-son-na-li-sée

Pronunciation

/de.pɛʁ.sɔ.na.li.ze/

Stress

000001

Morphemes

dé- + personne + -alisée

The word 'dépersonnalisée' is divided into six syllables: dé-per-son-na-li-sée. Stress falls on the final syllable. It's formed from the prefix 'dé-', the root 'personne', and the suffix '-alisée'. Syllabification follows vowel-based rules and avoids breaking consonant clusters. It functions as a feminine singular adjective meaning 'depersonalized'.

Definitions

adjective
  1. 1

    Deprived of individual characteristics or personality; impersonal.

    Depersonalized

    Une approche dépersonnalisée de la médecine.

Stress pattern

Stress falls on the final syllable ('sée'), which is typical for French adjectives. All other syllables are unstressed.

Syllables

6
/de/
per/pɛʁ/
son/sɔn/
na/na/
li/li/
sée/ze/

Open syllable, unstressed. Contains a single vowel sound.. per Open syllable, unstressed. Contains a vowel and a consonant cluster.. son Closed syllable, unstressed. Contains a vowel and a final consonant.. na Open syllable, unstressed. Contains a single vowel sound.. li Open syllable, unstressed. Contains a single vowel sound.. sée Closed syllable, stressed. Contains a vowel and a final consonant.

Vowel-Based Syllabification

Each vowel sound generally forms the nucleus of a syllable. This is the primary rule applied throughout the word.

Consonant Cluster Rule

Consonant clusters (like 'pr' in 'per') are generally kept together within a syllable unless they are complex or disrupt pronunciation.

Final Syllable Stress

Stress typically falls on the final syllable of a word in French.

  • The 'rs' cluster in 'personne' does not trigger syllable separation.
  • The final 'e' is silent but affects the pronunciation of the preceding vowel.
  • Liaison and elision possibilities exist in connected speech but do not alter the core syllabification.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/9/2025

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