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Word Analysis

disassuefacesti

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

6 syllables
15 characters
Italian
Enriched
6syllables

dissassuefacesti

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

dis-sas-sue-fa-ce-sti

Pronunciation

/dis.as.swe.faˈt͡ʃe.sti/

Stress

000011

Morphemes

dis- + assue- + -fac-

The Italian verb 'disassuefacesti' is divided into six syllables: dis-sas-sue-fa-ce-sti, with stress on the final syllable. It's morphologically complex, built from a prefix, root, and suffixes, and its syllabification follows standard Italian rules regarding open syllables, geminate consonants, and diphthongs.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    To have dissuaded, to have discouraged, to have broken someone of a habit.

    You dissuaded/discouraged (someone).

    Ti disassuefacesti dal fumo.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the final syllable 'sti'.

Syllables

6
dis/dis/
sas/sas/
sue/swe/
fa/fa/
ce/t͡ʃe/
sti/sti/

dis Open syllable, consonant cluster. sas Closed syllable, geminate consonant. sue Open syllable, diphthong. fa Open syllable. ce Open syllable, palatalization. sti Closed syllable, stressed

Open Syllable Rule

Syllables ending in vowels are generally open.

Geminate Consonant Rule

Geminate consonants create syllable boundaries.

Diphthong Rule

Diphthongs are treated as a single vowel sound within a syllable.

Final Syllable Stress Rule

In many Italian verb forms, the final syllable receives primary stress.

  • Gemination of 'ss' influences syllable weight.
  • Palatalization of 'c' before 'e' is a phonetic process, not affecting syllable division.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/13/2025
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