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Word Analysis

troussequinerai

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

6 syllables
15 characters
French
Enriched
6syllables

troussequinerai

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

trou-s-se-qui-ne-rai

Pronunciation

/tʁus.sə.ki.ne.ʁe/

Stress

000011

Morphemes

trouss- + sequ- + -iner-

The verb 'troussequinerai' is divided into six syllables (trou-s-se-qui-ne-rai) with stress on 'ne'. Syllabification follows CV/VC patterns and separates intervocalic consonants, consistent with French phonological rules.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    To pester, harass, or bother someone persistently.

    To pester, harass, annoy.

    Il me troussequinera toujours avec ses questions.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('ne').

Syllables

6
trou/tʁu/
s/s/
se/sə/
qui/ki/
ne/ne/
rai/ʁe/

trou Open syllable, initial consonant cluster.. s Closed syllable, single consonant between vowels.. se Open syllable, vowel preceded by consonant.. qui Open syllable, vowel preceded by consonant.. ne Open syllable, stressed syllable.. rai Open syllable, vowel preceded by consonant.

Consonant-Vowel (CV)

Syllables are often formed around a consonant-vowel pairing.

Vowel-Consonant (VC)

Vowels followed by consonants typically form a syllable.

Single Consonant Intervocalic

A single consonant between two vowels forms its own syllable.

Maximizing Onsets

French tends to maximize the number of consonants in the onset of a syllable.

  • The 's' between 'trou' and 'se' is a common intervocalic consonant syllabification.
  • Regional variations in pronunciation might affect vowel length but not syllable division.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/8/2025

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