HyphenateIt
Word Discovery10 words

Words with Suffix “--acchia-” in Italian

Browse Italian words ending with the suffix “--acchia-”, complete with pronunciations, syllable breakdowns, and linguistic insights.

All...

Total Words

10

Suffix

--acchia-

Page

1 / 1

Showing

10 words

--acchia- Italian frequentative/diminutive suffix.

innamoracchiamo
6 syllables15 letters
in·na·mo·rac·chia·mo
/in.na.mo.rak.kja.mo/
verb

The word 'innamoracchiamo' is a verb meaning 'we are falling in love.' It's divided into six syllables: in-na-mo-rac-chia-mo, with stress on 'rac.' It's morphologically complex, featuring a prefix, root, and two suffixes. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules of vowel-consonant division and handling consonant clusters.

innamoracchiano
6 syllables15 letters
in·na·mo·rac·chia·no
/in.na.mo.rak.ˈkja.no/
verb

The word 'innamoracchiano' is a verb with six syllables divided as 'in-na-mo-rac-chia-no'. It's derived from Latin roots and features an augmentative suffix. The primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'rac'. Syllabification follows vowel-centric rules and consonant cluster resolution principles.

innamoracchiava
6 syllables15 letters
in·na·mo·rac·chia·va
/in.na.mo.rak.ˈkja.va/
verb

The word 'innamoracchiava' is syllabified as in-na-mo-rac-chia-va, with stress on 'rac'. It's a verb derived from Latin roots, featuring a diminutive suffix that affects consonant cluster division. The analysis considers morphemic structure, phonetic transcription, and comparison with similar Italian words.

innamoracchiavi
6 syllables15 letters
in·na·mo·rac·chia·vi
/in.na.mo.rak.kjaˈvi/
verb

The word 'innamoracchiavi' is a complex Italian verb syllabified as in-na-mo-rac-chia-vi, with stress on 'chia'. It's formed from a Latin root with Italian suffixes, including the regional '-acchia-' suffix, influencing its syllable structure. It means 'to play matchmaker'.

invigliacchimmo
5 syllables15 letters
in·vi·glia·cchi·mo
/in.viˈʎa.k.kjo/
verb

The word 'invigliacchimmo' is a complex Italian verb form. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules, breaking up consonant clusters and vowel sequences. Stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('glia'). The word is morphologically complex, containing a prefix, root, and multiple suffixes. It means 'we complicated things' or 'we got into a mess'.

invigliacchisca
5 syllables15 letters
in·vi·glia·cchi·sca
/in.viˈʎa.kki.ska/
verb

The verb 'invigliacchisca' is divided into five syllables (in-vi-glia-cchi-sca) with primary stress on 'glia'. It's formed from the prefix 'in-', root 'vigli-', and suffixes '-acchia-' and '-sca-'. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules, preserving geminate consonants and dividing between vowels.

invigliacchisce
5 syllables15 letters
in·vi·glia·cchi·sce
/inviʎˈʎak.kiʃ.ʃe/
verb

The word 'invigliacchisce' is divided into five syllables: in-vi-glia-cchi-sce. It's a verb formed with a Latin prefix, root, and Italian suffixes. The stress falls on the third syllable ('glia'). Syllabification follows standard Italian rules of consonant-vowel grouping and geminate consonant handling.

invigliacchiste
5 syllables15 letters
in·vi·glia·cchi·ste
/inviʎˈʎak.kiste/
verb

The word 'invigliacchiste' is a verb form with five syllables divided according to Italian vowel-to-vowel and consonant cluster rules. Stress falls on the third syllable ('glia'). The word is morphologically complex, containing a prefix, root, and multiple suffixes. It means 'I entangle' or 'I complicate'.

scrivacchiavamo
5 syllables15 letters
scriv·ac·chia·va·mo
/skri.vak.kjaˈva.mo/
verb

The word 'scrivacchiavamo' is a verb form meaning 'we were scribbling'. It is divided into five syllables: scriv-ac-chia-va-mo, with stress on 'chia'. The morphemic breakdown reveals a prefix, root, and suffixes. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules regarding consonant clusters, vowel hiatus, and stress placement.

studiacchiavamo
6 syllables15 letters
stu·di·ac·chia·va·mo
/studjakˈkjaːvamo/
verb

The word 'studiacchiavamo' is syllabified as stu-di-ac-chia-va-mo, with primary stress on 'chia'. It's a verb form derived from 'studiare' with an intensive suffix '-acchia-'. Syllable division follows standard Italian CV/VC rules.