HyphenateIt
Word Discovery5 words

Words with Root “cravatt-” in Italian

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

All...

Total Words

5

Root

cravatt-

Page

1 / 1

Showing

5 words

cravatt- Derived from French 'cravate', Croatian origin.

incravattassero
6 syllables15 letters
in·cra·vat·ta·sse·ro
/ˌiŋ.krav.at.tasˈse.ro/
verb

The word 'incravattassero' is a verb form with a prefix 'in-', root 'cravatt-', and suffix '-assero'. Syllabification follows Italian rules, maintaining consonant clusters and dividing vowel sequences. Stress falls on the penultimate syllable. It means 'they would tie (a cravat/necktie)'.

incravatteranno
6 syllables15 letters
in·cra·vat·te·ran·no
/ˌiŋ.krav.vat.teˈran.no/
verb

The word 'incravatteranno' is a future tense verb form. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules, with attention to the geminate consonant 'tt' and the stress falling on the penultimate syllable. It's morphologically composed of a prefix, root, and suffix.

incravatterebbe
6 syllables15 letters
in·cra·vat·te·rre·bbe
/ˌiŋ.krav.at.teˈrebbe/
verb

The word 'incravatterebbe' is a verb in the conditional mood. It is divided into six syllables: in-cra-vat-te-rre-bbe, with stress on the penultimate syllable 'te'. The word is morphologically complex, consisting of a prefix, root, and suffix. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules based on vowel nuclei and consonant assignment.

incravatteremmo
6 syllables15 letters
in·cra·vat·te·rem·mo
/ˌiŋ.krav.vat.teˈrem.mo/
verb

The word 'incravatteremmo' is syllabified into six syllables (in-cra-vat-te-rem-mo) following vowel-centric rules and penultimate stress. It's a verb form derived from 'incravattare' (to tie a tie), with a prefix, root, and suffix. Syllabification is consistent across related verb forms.

incravatteresti
6 syllables15 letters
in·cra·vat·te·re·sti
/ˌiŋ.krav.vatˈte.resti/
verb

The word 'incravatteresti' is a verb form syllabified into six syllables (in-cra-vat-te-re-sti) with stress on the penultimate syllable. It follows standard Italian syllabification rules, breaking consonant clusters after the first consonant and forming syllables around vowel nuclei. The word is morphologically complex, consisting of a prefix, root, and suffix.