romoredd͡ʒamento
Syllables
ro-mo-re-dd͡ʒa-men-to
Pronunciation
/romo.red.d͡ʒaˈmento/
Stress
001000
Morphemes
ro- + -more- + -eggiamento
The word 'romoreggiamento' is a noun derived from Latin roots, meaning 'noise-making'. It is divided into six syllables: ro-mo-re-dd͡ʒa-men-to, with stress on the penultimate syllable. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules, maximizing onsets and dividing consonant clusters where necessary. The 'gg' cluster is treated as a single sound.
Definitions
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('re').
Syllables
ro — Open syllable, onset 'r', vowel 'o'.. mo — Open syllable, onset 'm', vowel 'o'.. re — Open syllable, onset 'r', vowel 'e'.. dd͡ʒa — Closed syllable, onset 'dd͡ʒ', vowel 'a'.. men — Closed syllable, onset 'm', vowel 'e', coda 'n'.. to — Open syllable, onset 't', vowel 'o'.
Word Parts
Similar Words
Vowel-Initial Syllable
Each vowel typically begins a new syllable.
Consonant Cluster Division
Consonant clusters are divided to create pronounceable syllables, maximizing onsets.
Maximizing Onsets
Syllables prefer to have an onset (initial consonant) if possible.
Penultimate Stress
Italian generally stresses the penultimate syllable unless specific rules dictate otherwise.
- The 'gg' cluster is treated as a single consonant sound for syllabification.
- Regional variations in the pronunciation of 'r' do not affect syllable division.
Nearby Words
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