consimigliavano
Syllables
con-si-mi-glia-va-no
Pronunciation
/konsiˈmiʎʎaˈvano/
Stress
000110
Morphemes
con- + sigl- + -ia-
The word 'consimigliavano' is divided into six syllables: con-si-mi-glia-va-no. The stress falls on the penultimate syllable. It's a verb form derived from Latin roots, with a prefix, root, and suffixes indicating tense, mood, and person. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules of vowel-consonant division and geminate consonant handling.
Definitions
- 1
To advise, to recommend (in the past, continuously or habitually).
They were advising, they used to advise, they recommended.
“I miei genitori mi consigliavano sempre di studiare.”
“Gli amici ci consigliavano un buon ristorante.”
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('va').
Syllables
con — Open syllable, initial syllable.. si — Open syllable, unstressed.. mi — Open syllable, unstressed.. glia — Syllable with geminate consonant, unstressed.. va — Open syllable, stressed.. no — Open syllable, final syllable.
Word Parts
Similar Words
Vowel-Consonant Division
Syllables are typically divided between vowels and consonants.
Consonant Cluster Division
Consonant clusters are split based on sonority, but geminate consonants remain together.
Penultimate Stress
Italian generally stresses the penultimate syllable.
- The geminate consonant /ʎʎ/ requires careful consideration but is permissible within a syllable in Italian.
- Regional variations in pronunciation might affect vowel qualities but not the core syllabification.
Nearby Words
17 wordsTrending in Italian
Terms getting hyphenated by users right now.