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Word Analysis

dimissioneremmo

Complete linguistic analysis including syllable division, pronunciation, morphology, and definitions.

6 syllables
15 characters
Italian
Enriched
6syllables

dimissioneremmo

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

di-mis-sio-ne-re-mmo

Pronunciation

/dimissjoˈne.remmo/

Stress

000100

Morphemes

di- + mis- + -sion-e-re-mmo

The Italian verb 'dimissioneremmo' ('we would have dismissed') is syllabified as di-mis-sio-ne-re-mmo, with stress on 'ne'. It's formed from Latin roots and suffixes, and its syllabification adheres to standard Italian rules prioritizing vowel sequences and geminate consonant integrity.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    Conditional past, first-person plural of 'dimettere'

    We would have dismissed/discharged/released

    Se avessimo avuto più informazioni, li avremmo dimissioneremmo.

    I pazienti sarebbero stati dimissioneremmo dopo i controlli.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the fourth syllable ('ne'), the penultimate syllable, following standard Italian stress rules.

Syllables

6
di/di/
mis/mis/
sio/sjo/
ne/ne/
re/re/
mmo/mmo/

di Open syllable, unstressed.. mis Closed syllable, unstressed.. sio Open syllable, unstressed. Contains geminate consonant.. ne Open syllable, stressed.. re Open syllable, unstressed.. mmo Closed syllable, unstressed.

Vowel Sequence

Vowels are generally kept within the same syllable.

Consonant Clusters

Consonant clusters are broken based on sonority, but geminate consonants are maintained.

Penultimate Stress

Italian words typically have stress on the penultimate syllable.

  • The geminate 'ss' followed by 'io' requires consideration, but the vowel sequence rule takes precedence.
  • Minimal regional variations in pronunciation.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/13/2025
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