dibrucherebbero
Syllables
di-bru-che-reb-be-ro
Pronunciation
/di.bru.ke.ˈrɛb.be.ro/
Stress
000100
Morphemes
di + bruc + erebbero
The word 'dibrucherebbero' is a third-person plural conditional verb form. It is divided into six syllables: di-bru-che-reb-be-ro, with primary stress on 'reb'. The syllabification follows standard Italian CV and CVC rules, and the stress pattern adheres to the penultimate stress rule.
Definitions
- 1
They would browse/graze.
They would browse/graze.
“Le pecore dibrucherebbero nel prato.”
“Se avessero l'opportunità, dibrucherebbero tutto il giorno.”
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('reb'). Italian follows a penultimate stress rule.
Syllables
di — Open syllable, consonant-vowel structure.. bru — Closed syllable, consonant-vowel-consonant structure.. che — Open syllable, consonant-vowel structure. 'c' pronounced as /k/ before 'e'.. reb — Closed, stressed syllable, consonant-vowel-consonant structure. Primary stress.. be — Open syllable, consonant-vowel structure.. ro — Open syllable, consonant-vowel structure.
Word Parts
Similar Words
Consonant-Vowel (CV)
Syllables are formed around vowel nuclei, with preceding consonants belonging to the same syllable.
Consonant-Vowel-Consonant (CVC)
Consonant clusters are resolved based on sonority and phonotactic constraints, but generally, consonants preceding a vowel belong to the same syllable.
Penultimate Stress
Italian generally stresses the penultimate syllable unless specific rules dictate otherwise.
- The 'br' consonant cluster does not pose a syllabification challenge. The conditional ending '-bbero' follows standard syllabification patterns.
Nearby Words
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