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Words with Root “pass-” in Italian

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

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pass-

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45 words

pass- From Latin *passus* (past participle of *pati* 'to suffer'). Core meaning related to passion.

appassionatamente
7 syllables17 letters
ap·pas·sio·na·te·men·te
/appassjoˈnaːmente/
adverb

The word 'appassionatamente' is divided into seven syllables: ap-pas-sio-na-te-men-te. It is an adverb formed from a Latin root with prefixes and suffixes. The primary stress falls on the fourth syllable ('na'). Syllable division follows the open syllable rule and consonant-vowel division principles.

compassatamente
6 syllables15 letters
com·pas·sa·ta·men·te
/kom.pas.sa.taˈmen.te/
adverb

The word 'compassatamente' is an adverb formed with the prefix 'com-', root 'pass-', and suffix '-atamente'. It is divided into six syllables with stress on the antepenultimate syllable. Syllabification follows vowel-centric rules and favors open syllables.

compasserebbero
6 syllables15 letters
com·pas·se·reb·be·ro
/kom.pas.seˈrɛb.be.ro/
verb

The word 'compasserebbero' is divided into six syllables: com-pas-se-reb-be-ro, with stress on the penultimate syllable. It's a verb form derived from Latin roots, and its syllabification follows standard Italian phonological rules based on vowel nuclei and consonant cluster resolution.

compassionarono
6 syllables15 letters
com·pas·sio·na·ro·no
/kom.pas.sjoˈna.ro.no/
verb

The word 'compassionarono' is divided into six open syllables following standard Italian syllabification rules. Stress falls on the penultimate syllable. The word is a verb form derived from Latin roots, meaning 'they felt compassion for'.

disappassionano
6 syllables15 letters
dis·ap·pas·sio·na·no
/dis.ap.pas.sjoˈna.no/
verb

The word 'disappassionano' is syllabified into six open syllables (dis-ap-pas-sio-na-no) following Italian's preference for vowel-final syllables. The stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'na'. The word is morphologically complex, comprising a negative prefix, a root relating to passion, and verbal suffixes.

disappassionare
6 syllables15 letters
dis·ap·pas·sio·na·re
/dis.ap.pas.sjoˈna.re/
verb

The word 'disappassionare' is divided into six syllables: dis-ap-pas-sio-na-re. The stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('na'). It's a verb formed from the prefix 'dis-', the root 'pass-', and the infinitive suffix '-are'. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules of vowel endings and consonant cluster breaks.

disappassionata
6 syllables15 letters
dis·ap·pas·sjo·na·ta
/dis.ap.pas.sjoˈna.ta/
adjective

The word 'disappassionata' is divided into six syllables: dis-ap-pas-sjo-na-ta, with stress on the penultimate syllable. It's formed from the prefix 'dis-', the root 'pass-', and the suffix '-ata'. Syllabification follows the consonant-vowel pattern, handling consonant clusters as single units where appropriate.

disappassionate
6 syllables15 letters
dis·ap·pas·sjo·na·te
/dis.ap.pas.sjoˈna.te/
adjective

The word 'disappassionate' is divided into six syllables following Italian CV rules, with stress on the penultimate syllable. It's a loanword with a Latin-derived morphemic structure, functioning as an adjective meaning 'impassioned'.

disappassionati
6 syllables15 letters
dis·ap·pas·sio·na·ti
/dis.ap.pas.sjoˈna.ti/
adjective

The word 'disappassionati' is divided into six syllables: dis-ap-pas-sio-na-ti. The stress falls on the penultimate syllable. It's morphologically composed of the prefix 'dis-', the root 'pass-', and the suffixes '-ion-' and '-ati'. Syllabification follows standard Italian CV rules, avoiding single intervocalic consonants and resolving diphthongs.

disappassionava
6 syllables15 letters
dis·ap·pas·sio·na·va
/dis.ap.pas.sjoˈna.va/
verb

The word 'disappassionava' is syllabified as dis-ap-pas-sio-na-va, with stress on the penultimate syllable 'na'. It's a verb form derived from Latin roots, meaning 'was becoming dispassionate'. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules of vowel-consonant separation and consonant cluster treatment.

disappassionavi
6 syllables15 letters
dis·ap·pas·sio·na·vi
/dis.ap.pas.sjoˈna.vi/
verb

The word 'disappassionavi' is divided into six syllables with stress on 'na'. It's a verb formed from Latin roots and Italian suffixes, following standard Italian syllabification rules.

disappassionera
6 syllables15 letters
dis·ap·pas·sio·ne·ra
/dis.ap.pas.sjoˈne.ra/
verb

The word 'disappassionera' is divided into six syllables (dis-ap-pas-sio-ne-ra) following Italian CV syllable structure and penultimate stress rules. It's a verb formed from a prefix, root, and suffixes, with a consistent syllabification pattern similar to other Italian words.

disappassionero
6 syllables15 letters
dis·ap·pas·sio·ne·ro
/dis.ap.pas.sjoˈne.ro/
verb

The word 'disappassionero' is syllabified as dis-ap-pas-sio-ne-ro, with stress on the penultimate syllable 'sio'. It's a verb form derived from Latin roots, exhibiting typical Italian syllabification patterns based on vowel endings and consonant cluster handling.

oltrapassassero
6 syllables15 letters
ol·tra·pas·sas·se·ro
/ol.tra.pas.sas.ˈse.ro/
verb

The word 'oltrapassassero' is a complex Italian verb form. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules, dividing the word into six syllables: ol-tra-pas-sas-se-ro. The stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('se'). The word is composed of the prefix 'oltre-', the root 'pass-', and a combination of suffixes indicating tense and person. The imperfect tense formation with the reduplicated 's' is a key feature influencing the syllable structure.

oltrapassassimo
6 syllables15 letters
ol·tra·pas·sas·si·mo
/ol.tra.pas.saˈsi.mo/
verb

The word 'oltrapassassimo' is syllabified as ol-tra-pas-sas-si-mo, with stress on the penultimate syllable 'si'. It's a verb form derived from Latin roots, exhibiting typical Italian syllabification patterns where syllables generally end in vowels and geminate consonants are allowed within syllables.

oltrapasseranno
6 syllables15 letters
ol·tra·pas·se·ran·no
/ol.tra.pas.seˈran.no/
verb

The word 'oltrapasseranno' is a future tense verb form divided into six syllables: ol-tra-pas-se-ran-no. Stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'ran'. The word is morphologically complex, consisting of a Latin-derived prefix, root, and suffix. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules favoring open syllables and penultimate stress.

oltrapasserebbe
6 syllables15 letters
ol·tra·pas·se·re·bbe
/ol.tra.pas.seˈre.bbe/
verb

The word 'oltrapasserebbe' is a verb in the conditional mood, meaning 'would surpass'. It's divided into six syllables: ol-tra-pas-se-re-bbe, with stress on the penultimate syllable 're'. The syllabification follows standard Italian rules, prioritizing consonant-vowel patterns and avoiding single consonants between vowels. The word's structure includes a Latin-derived prefix 'oltra-' and root 'pass-', combined with various suffixes for conjugation.

oltrapasseremmo
6 syllables15 letters
ol·tra·pas·se·rem·mo
/ol.tra.pas.ˈse.rem.mo/
verb

oltrapasseremmo is the conditional past of oltrepassare, meaning 'we would have surpassed'. It's divided into six syllables (ol-tra-pas-se-rem-mo) with stress on 'se'. Syllabification follows Italian's open syllable preference and standard consonant cluster treatment.

oltrapassereste
6 syllables15 letters
ol·tra·pas·se·res·te
/ol.tra.pas.seˈre.ste/
verb

The word 'oltrapassereste' is a verb form meaning 'you would exceed'. It is divided into six syllables: ol-tra-pas-se-res-te, with stress on the penultimate syllable. It's formed from the prefix 'oltra-', the root 'pass-', and the suffix '-ereste'. Syllabification follows standard Italian CV rules and cluster treatment.

oltrapasseresti
6 syllables15 letters
ol·tra·pas·se·res·ti
/ol.tra.pas.se.ˈres.ti/
verb

The word 'oltrapasseresti' is a second-person singular conditional verb form meaning 'you would exceed'. It is divided into six syllables: ol-tra-pas-se-res-ti, with stress on the penultimate syllable. The syllabification follows standard Italian rules, avoiding single intervocalic consonants and treating consonant clusters as onsets.

oltrepassassero
6 syllables15 letters
ol·tre·pas·sas·se·ro
/ol.tre.pas.saˈs.se.ro/
verb

The word 'oltrepassassero' is syllabified as ol-tre-pas-sas-se-ro, with stress on 'pas'. It's a verb form derived from Latin roots, and its syllabification follows standard Italian rules of vowel separation, consonant cluster handling, and penultimate stress.

oltrepassassimo
6 syllables15 letters
ol·tre·pas·sas·si·mo
/ol.tre.pas.sas.si.mo/
verb

The word 'oltrepassassimo' is syllabified as ol-tre-pas-sas-si-mo, with stress on 'pas'. It's the 1st person plural conditional past of 'oltrepassare', derived from Latin roots. Syllable division follows vowel-consonant rules and maintains geminate consonants within syllables.

oltrepasseranno
6 syllables15 letters
ol·tre·pas·sa·ren·no
/ol.tre.pas.sa.ˈren.no/
verb

The word 'oltrepasseranno' (they will surpass) is divided into six syllables: ol-tre-pas-sa-ren-no, with stress on 'ren'. It follows standard Italian syllable division rules based on vowel-consonant and consonant-vowel sequences. The word is morphologically complex, consisting of a prefix, root, interfix, and suffix.

oltrepasserebbe
6 syllables15 letters
ol·tre·pas·se·re·bbe
/ol.tre.pas.se.re.bbe/
verb

The word 'oltrepasserebbe' is divided into six syllables: ol-tre-pas-se-re-bbe. It's a verb in the conditional mood, derived from the Latin roots 'ultra' and 'passus'. Stress falls on the penultimate syllable 're'. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules of maximizing onsets and adhering to the penultimate stress pattern.

oltrepasseremmo
6 syllables15 letters
ol·tre·pas·se·rem·mo
/ol.tre.pas.se.ˈrem.mo/
verb

The word 'oltrepasseremmo' is syllabified as ol-tre-pas-se-rem-mo, with stress on 'rem'. It's a verb formed from the prefix 'oltre-', root 'pass-', and conditional ending '-eremmo'. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules of maximizing onsets and penultimate stress.

oltrepasseresti
6 syllables15 letters
ol·tre·pas·se·res·ti
/ol.tre.pas.se.reˈsti/
verb

The word 'oltrepasseresti' is syllabified as ol-tre-pas-se-res-ti, with stress on the penultimate syllable 'se'. It's a verb in the conditional mood, derived from Latin roots, and follows standard Italian syllabification rules based on CV/CVC structure and penultimate stress.

riappassionammo
6 syllables15 letters
ri·ap·pas·sio·nam·mo
/ri.ap.pas.sjoˈnam.mo/
verb

The Italian verb 'riappassionammo' (we rekindled passion) is syllabified as ri-ap-pas-sio-nam-mo, with stress on 'sio'. It's formed from the prefix 'ri-', root 'pass-', and suffixes '-ion-are-ammo'. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules, prioritizing vowel-consonant division and maintaining geminate consonants.

riappassionando
6 syllables15 letters
ri·ap·pas·sio·nan·do
/ri.ap.pas.sjoˈnan.do/
Verb (Gerund)

The word 'riappassionando' is divided into six syllables: ri-ap-pas-sio-nan-do. The stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('sio'). It's a gerund form derived from Latin roots, with a prefix 'ri-', root 'pass-', and suffixes '-ion-' and '-ando'. Syllabification follows standard Italian CV rules and stress placement.

riappassionante
6 syllables15 letters
ri·ap·pas·sio·nan·te
/ˌrja.p.pas.sjoˈna.nte/
adjective

The word 'riappassionante' is divided into six syllables: ri-ap-pas-sio-nan-te. The stress falls on the penultimate syllable. It's morphologically complex, built from a prefix, root, and multiple suffixes of Latin origin. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules, prioritizing maximizing onsets and adhering to permissible syllable structures.

riappassionarsi
6 syllables15 letters
ri·ap·pas·sio·nar·si
/ˌrja.p.pas.sjoˈna.rsi/
verb

The word 'riappassionarsi' is a verb formed through prefixation ('ri-'), a Latin root ('pass-'), and suffixation ('-ion-arsi'). It is divided into six syllables: ri-ap-pas-sio-nar-si, with primary stress on the penultimate syllable ('sio'). Syllabification follows standard Italian rules of open syllables, consonant clusters, and vowel hiatus.

riappassionasse
6 syllables15 letters
ri·ap·pas·sio·nas·se
/ri.ap.pas.sjoˈna.sse/
verb

The word 'riappassionasse' is a verb form with 6 syllables (ri-ap-pas-sio-nas-se). Stress falls on the penultimate syllable. It's morphologically complex, built from a prefix, root, and multiple suffixes. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules, maintaining consonant clusters and dividing between vowels and consonants.

riappassionassi
6 syllables15 letters
ri·ap·pas·sio·nas·si
/ˌrja.p.pas.sjoˈna.si/
verb

The Italian verb 'riappassionassi' (would have become passionate again) is divided into six syllables: ri-ap-pas-sio-nas-si, with stress on the penultimate syllable. It's morphologically complex, built from a prefix, root, and suffixes, and its syllabification adheres to standard Italian rules.

riappassionaste
6 syllables15 letters
ri·ap·pas·sio·nas·te
/ri.ap.pas.sjoˈna.ste/
verb

The word 'riappassionaste' is a conjugated verb form with 6 syllables (ri-ap-pas-sio-nas-te). It's built from the prefix 'ri-', the root 'pass-', and several suffixes. Stress falls on the penultimate syllable. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules, prioritizing open syllables and treating consonant clusters as single units.

riappassionasti
6 syllables15 letters
ri·ap·pas·sio·nas·ti
/ri.ap.pas.sjoˈna.sti/
verb

The word 'riappassionasti' is divided into six syllables (ri-ap-pas-sio-nas-ti) based on the consonant-vowel rule. Stress falls on the penultimate syllable. It's a verb form derived from Latin roots with a prefix and suffix indicating repetition and tense/person.

riappassionerai
6 syllables15 letters
ri·ap·pas·sio·ne·rai
/ri.ap.pas.sjoˈne.rai/
verb

The word 'riappassionerai' is a future tense verb form. It is divided into six syllables: ri-ap-pas-sio-ne-rai, with stress on the penultimate syllable 'sio'. The word is morphologically complex, consisting of a prefix, root, and multiple suffixes. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules of vowel-centered syllables and consonant cluster resolution.

riappassionerei
6 syllables15 letters
ri·ap·pas·sio·ne·rei
/ˌrja.p.pas.sjoˈne.rei/
verb

The word 'riappassionerei' is syllabified as ri-ap-pas-sio-ne-rei, with primary stress on 'sio'. It's a verb form derived from Latin roots, following standard Italian syllabification rules based on consonant-vowel patterns and maximizing onsets.

riappassioniamo
6 syllables15 letters
ri·ap·pas·sio·nia·mo
/ri.ap.pas.sjoˈnja.mo/
verb

The word 'riappassioniamo' is a verb divided into six syllables: ri-ap-pas-sio-nia-mo. The stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'nia'. The syllabification follows standard Italian rules, respecting vowel-consonant boundaries, consonant clusters, and morphemic divisions. It is derived from Latin roots and suffixes, indicating a process of re-igniting passion.

soprassederebbe
6 syllables15 letters
so·pra·sse·de·re·bbe
/so.pras.seˈde.reβ.be/
verb

The word 'soprassederebbe' is syllabified as so-pra-sse-de-re-bbe, with stress on the penultimate syllable. It's a verb form derived from Latin roots, exhibiting typical Italian syllable structure and phonological rules. The 'ss' cluster and conditional ending are key features of its analysis.

soprassedessero
6 syllables15 letters
so·pra·se·de·sse·ro
/so.pras.seˈdɛs.se.ro/
verb

The word 'soprassedessero' is syllabified as 'so-pra-se-de-sse-ro', with primary stress on the penultimate syllable. It's a verb form derived from 'soprassedere' with a prefix, root, and multiple suffixes. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules of open and closed syllables, considering geminate consonants.

sorpasserebbero
6 syllables15 letters
sor·pas·sa·re·bbe·ro
/sorpas.saˈrebb.bro/
verb

The word 'sorpasserebbero' is a verb in the conditional mood, third-person plural. It is divided into six syllables: sor-pas-sa-re-bbe-ro, with stress on the penultimate syllable 're'. The morphemic analysis reveals a Latin-derived prefix, root, and suffix. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules, prioritizing vowel-consonant-vowel division and maintaining consonant clusters.

sottopassassimo
6 syllables15 letters
sot·to·pas·sas·si·mo
/ˌsotto.pas.sas.ˈsi.mo/
verb

The word 'sottopassassimo' is a complex Italian verb form. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules, prioritizing open syllables and separating vowel sequences. The morphemic structure reveals Latin origins and a complex tense/mood formation. Stress falls on the penultimate syllable.

sottopasseranno
6 syllables15 letters
sot·to·pas·se·ran·no
/sot.to.pas.seˈran.no/
verb

The word 'sottopasseranno' is syllabified as sot-to-pas-se-ran-no, with stress on 'ran'. It's composed of the prefix 'sotto-', root 'pass-', and future tense ending '-anno'. Syllabification follows standard Italian CV rules and stress placement on the penultimate syllable.

sottopasserebbe
6 syllables15 letters
sot·to·pas·se·re·bbe
/sotto.pas.se.re.bbe/
verb

The word 'sottopasserebbe' is divided into five syllables: sot-to-pas-se-re-bbe. It consists of the prefix 'sotto-', the root 'pass-', and the conditional suffix '-erebbe'. The primary stress falls on the fourth syllable ('se'). Syllabification follows the standard Italian CV rule and avoids leaving single consonants between vowels.

sottopassereste
6 syllables15 letters
so·tto·pa·sse·re·ste
/sotto.pas.se.res.te/
verb

The word 'sottopassereste' is a third-person plural conditional verb meaning 'you (plural) would undergo'. It's divided into six syllables: so-tto-pa-sse-re-ste, with stress on the penultimate syllable. The morphemic structure consists of the prefix 'sotto-', the root 'pass-', and the suffix '-ereste'. Syllabification adheres to standard Italian rules, treating double consonants as single units.

sovrappassaggio
5 syllables15 letters
so·vra·ppa·ssa·ggio
/ˌsɔvrapːasˈsad͡ʒo/
noun

The word 'sovrappassaggio' is divided into five syllables: so-vra-ppa-ssa-ggio. It's a noun derived from Latin roots, with stress on the penultimate syllable. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules prioritizing vowel sounds and considering geminate consonants.