HyphenateIt
Word Analysis

fiammeggiassimo

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

6 syllables
15 characters
Italian
Enriched
6syllables

fiammeggiassimo

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

fia-mme-ggi-a-ssi-mo

Pronunciation

/fjammɛd͡ʒˈd͡ʒasːimo/

Stress

001000

Morphemes

fiamm + eggiassimo

The word 'fiammeggiassimo' is a complex verb form syllabified into six syllables: fia-mme-ggi-a-ssi-mo. The primary stress falls on the third syllable ('ggi'). It's derived from the root 'fiamm-' (flame) with a complex suffix indicating conditional past and intensity. Syllabification follows standard Italian CV and geminate consonant rules.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    Remote past conditional of 'fiammeggiare'.

    would have blazed intensely

    Se avessi avuto più legna, fiammeggiassimo tutta la notte.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the third syllable ('ggi').

Syllables

6
fia/fja/
mme/mme/
ggi/d͡ʒːi/
a/a/
ssi/si/
mo/mo/

fia Open syllable, consonant-vowel structure.. mme Open syllable, consonant-vowel structure.. ggi Closed syllable, geminate consonant followed by vowel.. a Open syllable, single vowel.. ssi Open syllable, consonant-vowel structure.. mo Open syllable, consonant-vowel structure.

Consonant-Vowel (CV)

Each consonant followed by a vowel typically forms a syllable.

Geminate Consonants

Geminate consonants are generally kept within the same syllable.

Vowel as Syllable

A single vowel constitutes a syllable.

  • The geminate 'gg' requires careful consideration, but is standard in Italian syllabification.
  • The sequence of consonants (mm, gg, ss) is permissible within Italian phonotactic constraints.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/10/2025
Open AI Chat