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Word Analysis

tire-bouchonnait

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

5 syllables
16 characters
French
Enriched
5syllables

tirebouchonnait

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

ti-re-bou-chon-nait

Pronunciation

/tiʁ.bu.ʃɔ.ne/

Stress

00001

Morphemes

tire- + bouchon- + -nait

The word 'tire-bouchonnait' is syllabified as ti-re-bou-chon-nait, with stress on the final syllable 'nait'. It's a verb form derived from 'tire-' (to pull), 'bouchon-' (cork), and '-nait' (imperfect indicative ending). Syllable division follows standard French rules of vowel-consonant separation and accommodation of consonant clusters.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    To uncork (a bottle), to be uncorking.

    To uncork, was uncorking.

    Il tire-bouchonnait la bouteille de vin.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the final syllable 'nait'.

Syllables

5
ti/ti/
re/ʁə/
bou/bu/
chon/ʃɔ̃/
nait/ne/

ti Open syllable, initial syllable.. re Open syllable.. bou Open syllable.. chon Closed syllable, contains a nasal vowel.. nait Open, stressed syllable.

Vowel-Consonant Division

Syllables are generally divided after vowels.

Consonant Cluster Accommodation

French allows consonant clusters within syllables, particularly at the beginning or end.

Stress-Based Division

The final syllable is often stressed, influencing perceived syllable boundaries.

  • The compound nature of the verb does not alter standard syllabification rules.
  • Regional variations in pronunciation of 'r' do not affect syllable division.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/7/2025

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