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Word Analysis

imperméabilisasses

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

8 syllables
18 characters
French
Enriched
8syllables

imperabilizases

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

im-per-mé-a-bi-li-za-ses

Pronunciation

/im.pɛʁ.me.a.bi.li.za.sɛ/

Stress

00100101

Morphemes

im- + permé- + -éabilisasses

The word 'imperméabilisasses' is a complex, archaic French verb form. Syllabification follows vowel-based rules, with the final syllable '-asses' receiving primary stress. The word's morphology reveals Latin roots and multiple suffixes, including a rare subjunctive ending. Its syllable division is consistent with standard French phonological rules, despite the unusual ending.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    They would seat/place impermeably.

    They would waterproof/seat impermeably

    Les artisans, si on leur avait donné les moyens, imperméabilisasses les toits de la ville.

Stress pattern

Primary stress on the final syllable '-ses', with a secondary stress on '-mé-'. French stress is typically on the final syllable.

Syllables

8
im/im/
per/pɛʁ/
/me/
a/a/
bi/bi/
li/li/
za/za/
ses/sɛ/

im Closed syllable, initial syllable.. per Open syllable, contains a nasal vowel.. Open syllable, secondary stress.. a Open syllable, vowel sound.. bi Closed syllable, contains a high vowel.. li Open syllable, linking vowel.. za Open syllable, vowel sound.. ses Closed syllable, final syllable, primary stress.

Vowel-Based Division

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

Consonant Cluster Rule

Consonant clusters are maintained unless a natural vowel separation exists.

Final Syllable Rule

The final syllable often contains the stress and any trailing consonants.

Linking Vowel Rule

Linking vowels like '-i-' can form their own syllable or merge with adjacent ones.

  • The '-asses' ending is an archaic subjunctive form, making this word rare and influencing the final syllable division.
  • The pronunciation of vowel sounds can vary slightly based on regional accents, but the syllable division remains consistent.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/6/2025

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