HyphenateIt
Word Discovery5 words

Words with Root “sermone” in Italian

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

All...

Total Words

5

Root

sermone

Page

1 / 1

Showing

5 words

sermone From Latin 'sermo' - speech, discourse

sermoneggeranno
6 syllables15 letters
ser·mo·ne·gge·ran·no
/ser.mo.neɡ.ɡeˈran.no/
verb

The word 'sermoneggeranno' is a future tense verb form. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules, prioritizing open syllables and breaking consonant clusters. The primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable. The geminate 'gg' presents a minor edge case regarding pronunciation duration.

sermoneggeresti
6 syllables15 letters
ser·mo·ne·ge·re·sti
/ser.mo.neɡ.ˈɡe.resti/
Verb

The word 'sermoneggeresti' is a verb form divided into six syllables: ser-mo-ne-ge-re-sti. The stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'ge'. It's morphologically complex, built from the root 'sermone' and the conditional suffix '-eggeresti'. Syllabification follows standard Italian CV rules and penultimate stress assignment.

sermoneggiavamo
5 syllables15 letters
ser·mo·neggia·va·mo
/ser.mo.neɡ.d͡ʒaˈva.mo/
Verb

The word 'sermoneggiavamo' is divided into five syllables: ser-mo-neggia-va-mo. The stress falls on 'va'. It's a verb form derived from Latin roots, with an augmentative suffix. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules, splitting geminate consonants and forming syllables around vowel nuclei.

sermoneggiavano
6 syllables15 letters
ser·mo·ne·ggia·va·no
/ser.mo.neɡ.ˈd͡ʒa.va.no/
verb

The word 'sermoneggiavano' is a verb divided into six syllables: ser-mo-ne-ggia-va-no. The stress falls on the penultimate syllable. It's morphologically composed of a Latin root 'sermone-' and iterative/tense suffixes. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules of vowel endings and geminate consonant treatment.

sermoneggiavate
6 syllables15 letters
ser·mo·ne·ggia·va·te
/ser.mo.neɡ.d͡ʒa.ˈva.te/
verb

The word 'sermoneggiavate' is divided into six syllables: ser-mo-ne-ggia-va-te. The stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'va'. The word is morphologically complex, consisting of a Latin-derived root and several suffixes. Syllabification follows standard Italian vowel-based rules, with the 'gg' cluster forming a syllable with the following vowel.