riammattonarono
Syllables
ri-am-mat-to-na-ro-no
Pronunciation
/ˌrjamːat.toˈna.ro.no/
Stress
0010100
Morphemes
ri- + matton- + -arono
The word 'riammattonarono' is a verb in the passato remoto, meaning 'they re-bricked'. It is divided into seven syllables: ri-am-mat-to-na-ro-no, with stress on the penultimate syllable 'na'. The morphemic breakdown reveals a prefix 'ri-', a root 'matton-', and a suffix '-arono'. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules, considering vowel-consonant division, geminate consonants, and prefix separation.
Definitions
- 1
To re-brick, to re-pave, to rebuild with bricks.
They re-bricked / They re-paved.
“Gli operai riammattonarono la piazza dopo i lavori.”
“Riammattonarono il muro crollato con cura.”
Stress pattern
The primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'na' (ri-am-mat-to-**na**-ro-no). This is typical for Italian words ending in a vowel.
Syllables
ri — Open syllable, containing the prefix. Relatively weak syllable.. am — Open syllable, part of the root.. mat — Closed syllable, part of the root.. to — Open syllable, part of the root, containing a geminate consonant.. na — Open syllable, stressed syllable.. ro — Open syllable, part of the inflectional ending.. no — Open syllable, part of the inflectional ending.
Word Parts
Similar Words
Vowel-Consonant Division
Syllables are typically divided between vowels and consonants.
Geminate Consonant Rule
Geminate consonants are generally maintained within the following syllable.
Prefix Rule
Prefixes generally form a separate syllable.
Penultimate Stress
Italian words ending in a vowel, 'n', or 's' are typically stressed on the penultimate syllable.
- The geminate consonant 'tt' requires careful syllabification.
- Regional variations in pronunciation might affect the realization of the 'ri-' prefix, but not the core syllabic structure.
Nearby Words
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