incarbonchiróno
Syllables
in-car-bon-chi-ró-no
Pronunciation
/ˌiŋkarboŋˈkiːrono/
Stress
000100
Morphemes
in- + carbon- + -chire-rono
The word 'incarbonchirono' is a verb form divided into six syllables: in-car-bon-chi-ró-no. The stress falls on the penultimate syllable. It's composed of the prefix 'in-', the root 'carbon-', and the verbal suffix '-chire-rono'. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules, respecting vowel-consonant boundaries and maintaining consonant clusters within syllables.
Definitions
Stress pattern
The primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('ró'). The stress pattern is typical for Italian verbs in the passato remoto.
Syllables
in — Open syllable, containing the prefix. Relatively simple structure.. car — Open syllable, containing part of the root. Simple structure.. bon — Open syllable, containing part of the root. Simple structure.. chi — Open syllable, containing part of the verb suffix. Relatively simple structure.. ró — Stressed, open syllable. Contains part of the verb suffix and the stress.. no — Open syllable, containing the verb ending. Simple structure.
Word Parts
Similar Words
Vowel-Consonant Division
Syllables are generally divided between vowels and consonants.
Consonant Cluster Handling
Consonant clusters are kept together within a syllable if they form a single phonological unit.
Stress-Based Division
Syllable division can be influenced by stress placement.
Morpheme Integrity
Syllable division respects morpheme boundaries.
- The 'nch' cluster is a potential point of variation in pronunciation, but standard Italian maintains it within the syllable.
Nearby Words
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