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Word Analysis

recroquevillerons

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

6 syllables
17 characters
French
Enriched
6syllables

recroquevillerons

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

re-cro-que-vil-le-rons

Pronunciation

/ʁə.kʁɔ.kə.vi.lɛ.ʁɔ̃/

Stress

010100

Morphemes

re- + croque- + -viller-

The word 'recroquevillerons' is a future tense verb form divided into six syllables: re-cro-que-vil-le-rons. It features a prefix 're-', a root 'croque-', and suffixes '-viller-' and '-ons'. The primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'vil'. Syllabification follows French rules prioritizing vowel sounds and maintaining consonant clusters.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    To curl up, to huddle, to crouch.

    We will curl up/huddle/crouch.

    Nous recroquevillerons sur le canapé pour regarder un film.

    Ils se recroquevillerons sous la pluie.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'vil'. French stress is relatively weak and evenly distributed.

Syllables

6
re/ʁə/
cro/kʁɔ/
que/kə/
vil/vi/
le/lɛ/
rons/ʁɔ̃/

re Open syllable, unstressed.. cro Open syllable, stressed.. que Closed syllable, unstressed.. vil Open syllable, primary stress.. le Open syllable, unstressed.. rons Closed syllable, unstressed.

Open Syllables

Syllables ending in a vowel sound are generally open.

Consonant Clusters

Consonant clusters are maintained unless complex.

Vowel Groupings

Vowel groupings are separated into distinct syllables.

Suffixes

Suffixes are typically separated into their own syllables.

  • The schwa /ə/ in 'que' can be elided in rapid speech but doesn't change the syllable division.
  • The uvular 'r' sound affects pronunciation but not syllabification.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/6/2025

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