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Word Analysis

risciogliereste

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

6 syllables
15 characters
Italian
Enriched
6syllables

risciogliereste

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

ri-sci-o-glie-re-ste

Pronunciation

/riʃˈʃoʎʎeˈreste/

Stress

0 0 0 1 0 0

Morphemes

ri- + scioglie- + -reste

The word 'risciogliereste' is syllabified as 'ri-sci-o-glie-re-ste', with stress on 'glie'. It's morphologically complex, consisting of the prefix 'ri-', the root 'scioglie-', and the suffix '-reste'. Syllable division follows standard Italian rules of vowel-consonant separation and maintains consonant clusters. The word is a verb in the conditional mood, 2nd person plural, meaning 'you (all) would melt/dissolve'.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    You (plural) would melt/dissolve.

    You (all) would melt/dissolve.

    Se aveste più tempo, risciogliereste il ghiaccio.

    Risciogliereste le vostre preoccupazioni con un po' di calma.

Stress pattern

The primary stress falls on the fourth syllable, 'glie' (/ʎe/). This follows the general Italian rule of penultimate stress.

Syllables

6
ri/ri/
sci/ʃi/
o/o/
glie/ʎe/
re/re/
ste/ste/

ri Open syllable, initial syllable.. sci Closed syllable, palatalized consonant cluster.. o Open syllable, vowel sound.. glie Closed syllable, stressed syllable, palatalized liquid consonant.. re Open syllable, final syllable before the suffix.. ste Closed syllable, conditional ending.

Vowel-Consonant-Vowel

Syllables are generally divided between vowels and consonants, creating open and closed syllables.

Consonant Clusters

Consonant clusters are maintained within a syllable unless they are easily separable based on pronunciation.

Penultimate Stress

Italian generally stresses the penultimate syllable, influencing the perceived prominence of each syllable.

Prefix Separation

Prefixes are generally separated into their own syllables.

  • The 'sci' cluster is treated as a single unit for syllabification due to its palatalized pronunciation.
  • The double 'l' in 'sciogliere' does not create a syllable break.
  • Regional variations in pronunciation might subtly affect perceived syllable boundaries, but not the written division.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/8/2025
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