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Word Analysis

provigionassimo

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

6 syllables
15 characters
Italian
Enriched
6syllables

provigionassimo

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

pro-vi-gio-na-ssi-mo

Pronunciation

/pro.vi.dʒo.naˈssi.mo/

Stress

000100

Morphemes

pro- + vigione + -assimo

The word 'provigionassimo' is a superlative adjective formed from Latin roots. It is divided into six syllables: pro-vi-gio-na-ssi-mo, with stress on the fourth syllable ('na'). The geminate consonant 'ss' is a key feature of its pronunciation and syllabification. It follows standard Italian phonological rules for stress and syllable division.

Definitions

adjective
  1. 1

    Extremely well-supplied, abundantly provisioned, fully stocked.

    Very well-supplied, extremely stocked.

    Il magazzino era provigionassimo di cibo.

    La città era provigionassimo di acqua potabile.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the fourth syllable ('na'), following the penultimate stress rule for Italian.

Syllables

6
pro/pro/
vi/vi/
gio/dʒo/
na/na/
ssi/ssi/
mo/mo/

pro Open syllable, unstressed.. vi Open syllable, unstressed.. gio Open syllable, unstressed.. na Open syllable, stressed.. ssi Closed syllable with geminate consonant, unstressed.. mo Closed syllable, unstressed.

Vowel-Consonant Division

Syllables are divided between vowels and consonants.

Geminate Consonant Rule

Geminate consonants are maintained within a single syllable.

Penultimate Stress

Italian generally stresses the penultimate syllable.

Prefix/Suffix Separation

Prefixes and suffixes are often separated into distinct syllables.

  • The geminate consonant 'ss' is crucial for pronunciation and must be maintained within a single syllable.
  • The word follows standard Italian syllabification rules without significant exceptions.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/9/2025
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