pharmacothérapies
Syllables
phar-ma-co-thé-ra-pies
Pronunciation
/faʁ.ma.kɔ.te.ʁa.pi(z)/
Stress
000001
Morphemes
pharmaco- + thérapi- + -es
The word 'pharmacothérapies' is divided into six syllables based on vowel sounds and morphological boundaries. Stress falls on the final syllable. It's a feminine plural noun derived from Greek and Latin roots, referring to drug-based treatments.
Definitions
- 1
Treatments using drugs; pharmacological therapies.
Pharmacotherapies
“Les pharmacothérapies sont souvent utilisées en complément de la psychothérapie.”
“Il a bénéficié de plusieurs pharmacothérapies pour traiter sa dépression.”
Stress pattern
Stress falls on the final syllable '-pies', which is typical for French nouns.
Syllables
phar — Open syllable, initial syllable, contains a nasal vowel.. ma — Open syllable, contains a high vowel.. co — Open syllable, contains a mid vowel.. thé — Open syllable, contains a close mid vowel.. ra — Open syllable, contains a low vowel.. pies — Closed syllable, final syllable, stressed, contains a high vowel and a potential liaison.
Word Parts
Vowel-Based Division
Syllables are formed around vowel sounds.
Consonant Cluster Handling
Consonant clusters are kept together if pronounceable as a unit.
Final Consonant Rule
A single consonant at the end of a syllable usually remains with the preceding vowel.
Prefix/Suffix Separation
Prefixes and suffixes are separated into distinct syllables.
- The 'th' cluster is pronounced as /t/ due to the Greek origin.
- The final 's' is silent in isolation but can trigger liaison.
Nearby Words
17 wordsTrending in French
Terms getting hyphenated by users right now.
- outside
- orientatrice
- vandalisera
- sufisamment
- abjures
- abjurez
- abjurer
- abjurée
- abjurât
- abjuras
- abjurai
- abjecte
- abjects
- abîmiez
- abîmons
- abîmées
- abîment
- abîmera
- abîmant
- abîmais