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Word Analysis

désincorporerais

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

6 syllables
16 characters
French
Enriched
6syllables

s'incorporais

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

dé-s'-in-cor-po-rais

Pronunciation

/de.z‿ɛ̃.kɔʁ.pɔ.ʁe/

Stress

00100

Morphemes

dés- + incorpor- + -erais

The word 'désincorporerais' is a verb form divided into five syllables: 'dé-s'-in-cor-po-rais'. It consists of the prefix 'dés-', the root 'incorpor-', and the conditional suffix '-erais'. The primary stress falls on the third syllable ('cor'). Syllabification follows vowel-centric rules and accounts for liaison.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    To disincorporate; to remove from a body or organization; to separate.

    To disincorporate, to unincorporate, to separate.

    Je désincorporerais cette clause du contrat.

    Il désincorporerait volontiers cette idée de son esprit.

Stress pattern

The primary stress falls on the third syllable ('cor'). French stress is generally less prominent than in English, but this syllable receives a slight emphasis.

Syllables

5
/de/
s'in/z‿ɛ̃/
cor/kɔʁ/
po/pɔ/
rais/ʁe/

Open syllable, containing the prefix. Unstressed.. s'in Open syllable, liaison with the following syllable. Unstressed.. cor Closed syllable, containing the root. Primary stressed syllable.. po Open syllable, part of the root. Unstressed.. rais Closed syllable, containing the conditional suffix. Unstressed.

Vowel-Centric Syllabification

French syllables are generally built around vowel sounds. Each vowel (or vowel digraph) typically forms the nucleus of a syllable.

Consonant Cluster Handling

Consonant clusters are generally maintained within a syllable unless they are complex and involve a sonorant consonant (l, m, n, r).

Liaison

Liaison between words or morphemes can create new syllable boundaries, as seen with 's'in'.

  • The pronunciation of the 'r' sound as a uvular fricative can influence the perceived boundaries between syllables, but doesn't alter the underlying syllabification rules.
  • The liaison between 'dé-' and 's'in' is a common feature of French pronunciation and affects syllable division.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/8/2025

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