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Word Analysis

questionneront

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

4 syllables
14 characters
French
Enriched
4syllables

questionneront

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

ques-tion-ne-ront

Pronunciation

/kɛs.tɔ.ne.ʁɔ̃/

Stress

0010

Morphemes

question + neront

The verb 'questionneront' is divided into four syllables (ques-tion-ne-ront) with stress on the penultimate syllable. Syllabification follows standard French rules, maximizing onsets and dividing after vowel-consonant sequences. It's derived from Latin roots and functions as a future tense verb.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    To question (they will).

    They will question.

    Ils questionneront les témoins.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('ne'). French stress is generally weaker than in English, but the second-to-last syllable receives slightly more prominence.

Syllables

4
ques/kɛs/
tion/tɔ̃/
ne/nə/
ront/ʁɔ̃/

ques Closed syllable, onset 'qu', vowel 'e', coda 's'. tion Closed syllable, onset 't', vowel 'ɔ', coda 'n' (nasal vowel). ne Open syllable, onset 'n', vowel 'e' (schwa), stressed syllable. ront Closed syllable, onset 'ʁ', vowel 'ɔ', coda 't' (nasal vowel)

Onset Maximization

French prefers to maximize the number of consonants in the onset of a syllable (e.g., 'qu' as a single onset).

Vowel-Consonant Division

Syllables are generally divided after a vowel followed by a consonant (e.g., 'tion-ne').

Avoid Single-Consonant Onsets

Avoid leaving a single consonant as the onset of a syllable if possible.

  • The 'qu' digraph is treated as a single onset unit.
  • The nasal vowels /ɔ̃/ do not affect syllable division.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/22/2025

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