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Words with Root “-gentil-” in Italian

Browse Italian words sharing the root “-gentil-”, complete with pronunciations, syllable breakdowns, and linguistic insights.

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-gentil-

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5 words

-gentil- From Latin 'gentilis', meaning 'gentle, mild'. Core meaning.

raggentiliranno
6 syllables15 letters
ra·ggen·ti·li·ran·no
/rag.d͡ʒen.ti.liˈranno/
verb

The word 'raggentiliranno' is a future tense verb form. It is divided into six syllables: ra-ggen-ti-li-ran-no, with primary stress on 'li'. The geminate consonant 'gg' creates a closed syllable. The word's morphemes derive from Latin roots, indicating intensification and gentleness.

raggentilirebbe
6 syllables15 letters
rag·gen·ti·li·re·bbe
/rad͡d͡ʒenˈtiliˈrebbe/
verb

The word 'raggentilirebbe' is a complex Italian verb form. Syllabification follows open syllable preference and consonant cluster resolution rules, with geminated consonants influencing syllable weight. Stress falls on the penultimate syllable. The word is derived from Latin roots and means 'would make neat/tidy/embellish'.

raggentilireste
7 syllables15 letters
ra·g·gen·ti·li·re·ste
/rag.d͡ʒen.ti.li.ˈre.ste/
verb

The word 'raggentilireste' is a complex Italian verb form. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules, splitting geminate consonants and prioritizing vowel-ending syllables. Stress falls on the penultimate syllable. The word is morphologically complex, with a Latin-derived prefix, root, and suffixes.

raggentiliresti
6 syllables15 letters
ra·ggen·ti·li·re·sti
/rag.d͡ʒen.ti.li.ˈre.sti/
verb

The word 'raggentiliresti' is a complex Italian verb form. Syllabification follows vowel-final and consonant-vowel rules, with geminate consonants belonging to the following syllable. Stress falls on the penultimate syllable. The word is derived from Latin roots and means 'you would gentlify'.

raggentiliscano
6 syllables15 letters
rag·gen·ti·li·sca·no
/rad͡d͡ʒenˈtiliʃʃano/
verb

The word 'raggentiliscano' is a complex verb form derived from Latin roots. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules, prioritizing vowel-centered syllables and handling geminate consonants and consonant clusters appropriately. The primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable.