disghiottirebbe
Syllables
dis-ghi-ot-ti-reb-be
Pronunciation
/disɡjotˈtirebbe/
Stress
001000
Morphemes
dis- + ghiott- + -irebbe
The word 'disghiottirebbe' is a conditional verb form broken down into six syllables: dis-ghi-ot-ti-reb-be. The stress falls on the fourth syllable ('ti'). It's morphologically composed of the prefix 'dis-', root 'ghiott-', and the suffix '-irebbe'. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules regarding consonant clusters, geminate consonants, and vowel groups.
Definitions
- 1
To relish, to enjoy greatly, to savor (food or an experience).
Would relish, would savor, would enjoy greatly.
“Lui disghiottirebbe un buon bicchiere di vino.”
“Disghiottirebbe ogni momento di questa vacanza.”
Stress pattern
The primary stress falls on the fourth syllable, 'ti' (/ˈti/), making it the stressed syllable. All other syllables are unstressed.
Syllables
dis — Open syllable, initial syllable.. ghi — Open syllable, contains the digraph 'gh' representing /ɡ/.. ot — Closed syllable, contains the root vowel.. ti — Closed syllable, stressed syllable.. reb — Closed syllable, part of the conditional ending.. be — Open syllable, final syllable.
Word Parts
Similar Words
Consonant Clusters
Italian generally breaks consonant clusters to create syllables with a simple structure (CV).
Geminate Consonants
Geminate consonants are split, with the consonant belonging to the following syllable.
Vowel Groups
Vowel groups are generally separated into distinct syllables.
Penultimate Stress
Italian words ending in a vowel are generally stressed on the penultimate syllable.
- The 'gh' digraph represents /ɡ/ and requires knowledge of Italian orthography.
- The geminate consonant 'tt' requires careful handling to avoid mis-syllabification.
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