récapitulatifs
The word 'récapitulatifs' is a French noun divided into six syllables: ré-ca-pi-tu-la-tifs. It's built from Latin roots and suffixes, with stress on the final syllable. Syllabification follows standard French rules of vowel-consonant division and avoiding single intervocalic consonants.
Definitions
- 1
Summaries, recapitulations, overviews.
Summaries
“Les récapitulatifs de la réunion sont disponibles.”
“Il a demandé des récapitulatifs des ventes.”
Stress pattern
Stress falls on the final syllable ('tifs'). French typically stresses the last syllable of a word.
Syllables
ré — Open syllable, initial syllable.. ca — Open syllable.. pi — Open syllable.. tu — Open syllable.. la — Open syllable.. tif — Closed syllable, stressed syllable.
Word Parts
Similar Words
Vowel-Consonant Division
Syllables are generally divided after vowels.
Avoid Single Intervocalic Consonant
French avoids leaving a single consonant between vowels.
Final Syllable Stress
Stress falls on the final syllable.
- The 'p' before 'i' is not always strongly aspirated.
- The nasal vowel in 'tif' is a key feature of French pronunciation.
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