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Word Analysis

hiérarchiseraient

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

6 syllables
17 characters
French
Enriched
6syllables

hiérarchiseraient

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

hi-é-rar-chi-se-raient

Pronunciation

/jɛ.ʁaʁ.ʃi.zɛ.ʁɛ̃/

Stress

000001

Morphemes

hiér- + arch- + -iseraient

The word 'hiérarchiseraient' is syllabified into hi-é-rar-chi-se-raient, with stress on the final syllable '-raient'. It's a verb derived from Greek roots, and its syllabification follows standard French rules prioritizing vowel sounds and maintaining consonant clusters. The analysis considers morphemic structure, phonetic transcription, and comparison with similar words to ensure accuracy.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    To hierarchize, to arrange in a hierarchy, to classify according to rank.

    Would hierarchize

    Ils hiérarchiseraient les informations pour une meilleure compréhension.

Stress pattern

The primary stress falls on the last syllable, '-raient', as is typical in French.

Syllables

6
hi/i/
é/e/
rar/ʁaʁ/
chi/ʃi/
se/zɛ/
raient/ʁɛ̃/

hi Open syllable, containing a vowel sound.. é Open syllable, containing a vowel sound with a circumflex accent.. rar Closed syllable, containing a vowel and two 'r' sounds. The 'r' sounds form a complex cluster.. chi Closed syllable, containing a vowel and a consonant cluster 'ch'.. se Open syllable, containing a vowel and a consonant.. raient Closed syllable, containing a vowel and a nasal consonant. This syllable receives primary stress.

Vowel-Based Division

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

Consonant Cluster Rule

Consonant clusters are maintained unless they are easily separable in pronunciation, as seen in 'rar' and 'chi'.

Final Syllable Rule

The final syllable often includes any remaining consonants, as in '-raient'.

  • The circumflex accent on 'i' indicates a historical 's' that has been elided, influencing pronunciation but not syllabification.
  • The uvular 'r' sound can create complex syllable boundaries, but the rules consistently apply.
  • The word is exclusively a verb, so syllabification doesn't shift based on grammatical function.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/7/2025

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