triomphalement
Syllables
tri-om-pha-le-ment
Pronunciation
/tʁjɔ̃.fal.mɑ̃.mɑ̃/
Stress
00101
Morphemes
tri- + omphal- + -alement
The word 'triomphalement' is divided into five syllables: tri-om-pha-le-ment. It's an adverb formed from a Latin/Greek root with French suffixes. Stress falls on the penultimate syllable. Syllabification follows standard French CV structure and vowel nucleus rules, with considerations for the 'ph' digraph and nasal vowels.
Definitions
- 1
In a triumphant manner; gloriously; victoriously.
Triumphantly
“Il a été accueilli triomphalement.”
“Elle a souri triomphalement.”
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('pha'). French stress is typically on the last syllable of a phrase, but here it falls on the penultimate syllable due to the pause after the word.
Syllables
tri — Open syllable, consonant-vowel structure.. om — Closed syllable, nasal vowel forming the nucleus.. pha — Open syllable, 'ph' digraph pronounced as /f/.. le — Open syllable, consonant-vowel structure.. ment — Closed syllable, nasal vowel forming the nucleus.
Word Parts
CV Syllable Structure
Consonant-Vowel sequences generally form syllables.
Vowel as Syllable Nucleus
Vowels, especially nasal vowels, can form syllables on their own.
Maximize Onsets
French tends to maximize the number of consonants in the onset of a syllable.
- The 'ph' digraph is pronounced as /f/.
- Nasal vowels can sometimes lead to ambiguity, but form clear syllables here.
Nearby Words
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