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Word Analysis

radiotélégraphiasses

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

7 syllables
20 characters
French
Enriched
7syllables

radiographiasses

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

ra-dio-té-lé-gra-phi-asses

Pronunciation

/ʁa.djo.te.le.ɡʁa.fi.jas/

Stress

0000001

Morphemes

radio- + graph- + -télé-ier-asses

The word 'radiotélégraphiasses' is a complex verb form syllabified based on vowel sounds and French phonological rules. It consists of seven syllables, with primary stress on the final syllable '-sses'. The word is composed of prefixes 'radio-' and 'télé-', a root 'graph-', and suffixes '-ier' and '-asses'.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    Second-person plural imperfect subjunctive of 'radiotélégraphier'.

    You all would radiotelegraph.

    Si vous radiotélégraphiasses, je vous répondrais.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the final syllable '-sses', as is typical in French.

Syllables

7
ra/ʁa/
dio/djo/
/te/
/le/
gra/ɡʁa/
phi/fi/
as/jas/

ra Open syllable, initial syllable, stressed (weakly).. dio Open syllable, contains a diphthong.. Open syllable, stressed (weakly).. Open syllable, stressed (weakly).. gra Open syllable, stressed (weakly).. phi Open syllable, 'ph' pronounced as /f/.. as Closed syllable, final syllable, primary stress.

Vowel Nucleus Rule

Each syllable contains a vowel sound as its nucleus.

Consonant Cluster Rule

Consonant clusters are maintained unless they are complex and contain a sonorant consonant.

French Syllable Structure

French generally avoids syllable-final consonant clusters.

  • The 'ph' digraph is pronounced as /f/.
  • The imperfect subjunctive ending '-asses' is a key factor in the final syllable's stress.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/5/2025

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