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Word Analysis

institutionnalisasses

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

8 syllables
21 characters
French
Enriched
8syllables

institutionalisasses

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

in-sti-tu-tio-nal-i-sas-ses

Pronunciation

/ɛ̃.sti.ty.sjo.na.li.zas/

Stress

00001011

Morphemes

in- + stitution + -nalisasses

The word 'institutionnalisasses' is a complex verb form in French, divided into eight syllables based on vowel sounds and consonant clusters. It exhibits primary stress on the final syllable and secondary stress on the penultimate syllable. Its morphemic structure reveals Latin origins and multiple suffixes indicating grammatical function. Syllabification follows standard French rules, though the word's length and inflectional complexity present unique challenges.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    Imperfect subjunctive/conditional past, 3rd person plural of 'institutionnaliser'.

    They would institutionalize.

    Les pouvoirs publics institutionnalisasses les nouvelles normes.

Stress pattern

Primary stress on the final syllable '-ses' (1), secondary stress on '-nal-' (1), all other syllables are unstressed (0).

Syllables

8
in/ɛ̃/
sti/sti/
tu/ty/
tio/sjo/
nal/na.li/
i/i/
sas/zas/
ses/sɛs/

in Open syllable, containing a nasal vowel. Initial syllable.. sti Closed syllable, containing a consonant cluster 'st'. . tu Open syllable, vowel followed by a consonant.. tio Open syllable, vowel followed by a consonant.. nal Open syllable, secondary stress.. i Open syllable, short vowel.. sas Closed syllable, final syllable, primary stress.. ses Closed syllable, containing the inflectional ending.

Vowel-Based Division

Syllables are generally formed around vowel sounds.

Consonant Cluster Avoidance

Consonant clusters are kept together unless they are complex.

Final Syllable Rule

The final syllable often contains only a single vowel sound.

  • The word's length and complex morphology make it an exceptional case.
  • The imperfect subjunctive/conditional past ending '-ses' is rarely encountered in such a long word.
  • Potential for slight vowel reduction in unstressed syllables in some regional variations.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/5/2025

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