rilucchichereste
Syllables
ri-luc-chi-che-re-ste
Pronunciation
/ri.luk.kiˈke.re.ste/
Stress
000100
Morphemes
ri- + luc- + -ste
The word 'riluccichereste' is a verb in the conditional mood, 2nd person plural. It is syllabified as ri-luc-chi-che-re-ste, with stress on the penultimate syllable ('che'). The word is composed of a prefix 'ri-', root 'luc-', infix '-ich-', and suffixes '-ere' and '-ste'. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules, avoiding single initial consonants and treating digraphs as single units.
Definitions
- 1
To sparkle again, to shine again (conditional, 2nd person plural).
You (plural) would sparkle/shine again.
“Se aveste più fiducia in voi stessi, riluccichereste.”
Stress pattern
The primary stress falls on the fourth syllable ('che'), making it the penultimate syllable. The stress pattern is typical for Italian verbs.
Syllables
ri — Open syllable, initial syllable.. luc — Closed syllable, contains the root of the verb.. chi — Open syllable, contains the infix.. che — Open syllable, part of the infix.. re — Open syllable, part of the verb ending.. ste — Closed syllable, contains the conditional ending.
Word Parts
Similar Words
Consonant-Vowel (CV)
Syllables typically begin with a consonant and end with a vowel.
Vowel-Consonant (VC)
Syllables can also end with a consonant.
Digraphs
Digraphs like 'ch' are treated as single units for syllabification.
Avoid Single Initial Consonants
Italian avoids starting a syllable with a single consonant if possible, grouping it with the preceding vowel.
- The infix '-ich-' is a relatively uncommon feature in modern Italian, but it's historically present in verbs derived from Latin.
- The syllabification respects the infix '-ich-'.
- Regional variations in pronunciation are minimal for this word.
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