piroscindereste
Syllables
pi-ro-scin-de-re-ste
Pronunciation
/piroʃˈkindeɾeste/
Stress
001001
Morphemes
piro- + scind- + -ere-ste
The word 'piroscindereste' is a verb in the conditional mood, second person plural. It is syllabified as pi-ro-scin-de-re-ste, with stress on the penultimate syllable 'de'. It is morphologically composed of a prefix 'piro-', root 'scind-', and a conditional suffix '-ere-ste'. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules regarding consonant clusters and vowel-consonant-vowel patterns.
Definitions
- 1
Conditional form of 'piroscindere', meaning 'you (plural) would split/sever/cleave'.
You (plural) would split/sever/cleave.
“Se aveste gli strumenti giusti, pironscindereste il legno facilmente.”
“Voi pironscindereste il gruppo se non foste d'accordo.”
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'de'. The stress pattern is typical for Italian verbs.
Syllables
pi — Open syllable, initial syllable.. ro — Open syllable.. scin — Closed syllable, containing a consonant cluster.. de — Open, stressed syllable.. re — Open syllable.. ste — Closed syllable, final syllable.
Word Parts
piro-
Reinforcing prefix, likely intensifying the action of 'scindere'. Origin uncertain, related to 'piroscindere'.
scind-
From Latin 'scindere' (to split, cleave). Core meaning of the verb.
-ere-ste
Combination of infinitive ending and conditional ending for 2nd person plural ('voi'). Latin origin.
Similar Words
Consonant Clusters
Consonant clusters (like 'sc', 'nd') are maintained within a syllable unless easily separable by a vowel.
Vowel-Consonant-Vowel
Syllables are typically formed around vowel nuclei, with consonants assigned to the adjacent vowel.
Penultimate Stress
Italian generally stresses the penultimate syllable, unless specific phonetic or morphological factors dictate otherwise.
- The 'piro-' prefix is relatively uncommon but doesn't alter standard syllabification rules.
- The verb 'scindere' is not extremely frequent, but its structure is consistent with other Italian verbs.
Nearby Words
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