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Words with Prefix “piag--” in Italian

Browse Italian words starting with the prefix “piag--”, complete with pronunciations, syllable breakdowns, and linguistic insights.

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piag--

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5 words

piag-- From *piagnu-* related to weeping, whimpering; Latin origin (plangere).

piagnucoleranno
7 syllables15 letters
pi·ag·nu·co·le·ran·no
/pjaɲɲukoˈlɛɾanno/
verb

The word 'piagnucoleranno' is a future tense verb form. It is divided into seven syllables: pi-ag-nu-co-le-ran-no, with stress on the penultimate syllable 'le'. The morphemic breakdown reveals Latin origins in its prefix, root, and suffixes. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules based on vowel nuclei and penultimate stress.

piagnucolerebbe
7 syllables15 letters
pi·ag·nu·co·le·re·bbe
/pjaɲɲukoˈlɛrɛbbe/
verb

The word 'piagnucolerebbe' is a complex Italian verb form syllabified as pi-ag-nu-co-le-re-bbe, with stress on 'le'. It's morphologically derived from Latin roots and follows standard Italian CV/VC syllabification rules, with the 'gn' cluster treated as a single unit.

piagnucoleremmo
7 syllables15 letters
pi·ag·nu·co·le·rem·mo
/pjaɲɲukoˈlɛremmo/
verb

The word 'piagnucoleremmo' is a complex Italian verb form. It is syllabified as pi-ag-nu-co-le-rem-mo, with stress on the penultimate syllable 'le'. It is morphologically composed of a formative prefix 'piag-', a root '-gnucol-', and a conditional past suffix '-eremmo'. The syllabification follows standard Italian CV patterns and stress rules.

piagnucolereste
7 syllables15 letters
pi·ag·nu·co·le·re·ste
/pjaɲɲukoˈlɛːreste/
verb

The word 'piagnucolereste' is a verb form meaning 'you all would be whining.' It's divided into seven syllables with stress on 'le,' following standard Italian syllabification rules.

piagnucoleresti
7 syllables15 letters
pi·ag·nu·co·le·re·sti
/pjaɲɲukoˈlɛrɛsti/
verb

The word 'piagnucoleresti' is a conditional verb form meaning 'we would whine/cry softly'. It is syllabified as pi-ag-nu-co-le-re-sti, with stress on the penultimate syllable. The word's structure reflects its Latin origins and adheres to standard Italian syllabification rules, favoring open syllables and treating consonant clusters as single units.