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Word Analysis

incravattereste

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

6 syllables
15 characters
Italian
Enriched
6syllables

incravattereste

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

in-cra-vat-te-re-ste

Pronunciation

/ˌiŋ.krav.vatˈte.re.ste/

Stress

001000

Morphemes

in- + cravatta- + -re-ste

The word 'incravattereste' is a second-person plural conditional verb form meaning 'you (plural) would tie (a tie)'. It is divided into six syllables: in-cra-vat-te-re-ste, with stress on 'vat'. The syllabification follows standard Italian rules, avoiding single consonants between vowels and maintaining consonant clusters.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    To tie a tie (to someone, or to each other).

    You (plural) would tie (a tie).

    Vi incravattereste per la festa?

    Se avessi una cravatta, me l'incravattereste?

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('vat').

Syllables

6
in/in/
cra/kɾa/
vat/vat/
te/te/
re/re/
ste/ste/

in Open syllable, initial syllable. cra Closed syllable. vat Closed syllable, stressed. te Open syllable. re Open syllable. ste Closed syllable

Initial Syllable Rule

The first syllable often consists of the initial consonant(s) and the first vowel.

Consonant Cluster Rule

Consonant clusters are generally maintained within a syllable until a vowel is encountered.

Vowel-Consonant Rule

A vowel followed by a consonant typically forms a syllable.

Stress Rule

Stress in Italian generally falls on the penultimate syllable, unless indicated by an accent mark.

  • The 'in-' prefix is a common feature in Italian verbs.
  • The 'v' in 'cravat' is not separated from the following vowel to avoid a single consonant between vowels.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/10/2025
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