HyphenateIt
Word Analysis

transsubstantiées

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

5 syllables
17 characters
French
Enriched
5syllables

transsubstantiées

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

trans-sub-stan-ti-ées

Pronunciation

/tʁɑ̃.syb.stɑ̃.sjã.tje/

Stress

00001

Morphemes

trans- + substantier + -iées

The word 'transsubstantiées' is divided into five syllables: trans-sub-stan-ti-ées. Stress falls on the final syllable '-ées'. It's morphologically composed of the prefix 'trans-', the root 'substantier', and the suffix '-iées'. Syllabification follows vowel-based division, consonant cluster preservation, and final syllable stress rules typical of French.

Definitions

Verb (Past Participle/Adjective)
  1. 1

    Changed into substance; transformed in essence, particularly in a religious context referring to the Eucharist.

    Transubstantiated

    Les hosties ont été transsubstantiées.

Stress pattern

Stress falls on the final syllable '-ées', which is typical for French words. The stress is primary (1).

Syllables

5
trans/tʁɑ̃/
sub/syb/
stan/stɑ̃/
ti/sjã/
ées/tje/

trans Open syllable, containing a nasal vowel. Initial syllable.. sub Closed syllable, containing a consonant cluster. Follows 'trans'.. stan Open syllable, containing a nasal vowel. Follows 'sub'.. ti Open syllable, containing a nasal vowel. Follows 'stan'.. ées Closed syllable, stressed syllable, containing a semi-vowel and a vowel. Final syllable.

Vowel-Based Division

Syllables are formed around vowel sounds, creating distinct phonetic units.

Consonant Cluster Preservation

Consonant clusters are maintained within a syllable unless they are easily separable in pronunciation, as seen in 'trans-' and 'sub-'.

Final Syllable Stress

Stress typically falls on the final syllable of a French word, as observed in '-ées'.

Nasal Vowel Syllabification

Nasal vowels (e.g., /ɑ̃/, /ɛ̃/) generally form their own syllables.

  • The complex consonant clusters required careful consideration to avoid incorrect syllable breaks.
  • The nasal vowels influenced the syllabification process, as they function as syllable nuclei.
  • The word's inflection (feminine plural past participle) did not alter the core syllabification rules.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/6/2025

Trending in French

Terms getting hyphenated by users right now.

Open AI Chat