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Words with Root “accom-” in Italian

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

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accom-

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5 words

accom- From Latin 'ad-' (to) + 'com-' (with). Forms the base of the verb.

riaccompagnando
6 syllables15 letters
ri·ac·com·pa·gnan·do
/ri.ak.kom.paɲˈɲan.do/
Gerund

The word 'riaccompagnando' is divided into six syllables: ri-ac-com-pa-gnan-do. It's a gerund form derived from Latin roots, with stress on the penultimate syllable. The 'gn' cluster is treated as a single unit, and the syllabification follows standard Italian vowel-consonant division rules.

riaccompagnante
6 syllables15 letters
ri·ac·com·pa·gnan·te
/ri.ak.kom.paɲˈɲan.te/
Present Participle/Adjective

The word 'riaccompagnante' is divided into six syllables (ri-ac-com-pa-gnan-te) with stress on the penultimate syllable. It's formed from the prefix 'ri-', root 'accom-', and suffix '-gnante'. The 'gn' cluster is treated as a single phoneme.

riaccompagnanti
6 syllables15 letters
ri·ac·com·pa·gnan·ti
/ri.ak.kom.paɲˈɲan.ti/
Present Participle/Adjective

The word 'riaccompagnanti' is divided into six syllables: ri-ac-com-pa-gnan-ti. The stress falls on the penultimate syllable. It's morphologically complex, built from a prefix, root, and suffix, all with Latin origins. The 'gn' cluster is treated as a single unit in syllabification.

riaccompagnasse
6 syllables15 letters
ri·ac·com·pa·gnas·se
/ri.ak.kom.paɲˈɲas.se/
verb

The word 'riaccompagnasse' is syllabified as ri-ac-com-pa-gnas-se, with stress on 'gnas'. It's a verb form derived from Latin roots, and its syllabification follows standard Italian rules, particularly regarding consonant clusters like 'gn'.

riaccompagnaste
6 syllables15 letters
ri·ac·com·pa·gna·ste
/ri.ak.kom.paɲˈɲa.ste/
verb

The word 'riaccompagnaste' is divided into six syllables following CV syllabification rules. The primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'gna'. It's a verb form derived from Latin roots, with a prefix, root, and suffix. Syllabification is consistent across different verb forms, though stress patterns shift.