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Word Analysis

rumoreggiassimo

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

6 syllables
15 characters
Italian
Enriched
6syllables

rumoreggiassimo

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

ru-mo-reg-gia-ssi-mo

Pronunciation

/ru.mo.red.d͡ʒaˈs.si.mo/

Stress

001000

Morphemes

rumore + eggiassimo

The word 'rumoreggiassimo' is a verb form divided into six syllables: ru-mo-reg-gia-ssi-mo. The stress falls on 'gia'. It's morphologically complex, derived from the root 'rumore' with several suffixes indicating the subjunctive imperfect mood and an inchoative aspect. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules of vowel division, consonant cluster maintenance, and geminate consonant handling.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    To make a lot of noise, to be very noisy, to rumble.

    I would make a lot of noise / I was making a lot of noise (hypothetical/subjunctive context)

    Se rumoreggiassimo di più, forse ci sentirebbero.

    Non rumoreggiavo, stavo solo parlando.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'gia'

Syllables

6
ru/ru/
mo/mo/
reg/red͡ʒ/
gia/d͡ʒa/
ssi/s.si/
mo/mo/

ru Open syllable, initial syllable. mo Open syllable. reg Closed syllable, palatal consonant. gia Closed syllable, stressed. ssi Closed syllable, geminate consonant. mo Open syllable, final syllable

Vowel Division

Syllables are divided after vowels.

Consonant Cluster Maintenance

Consonant clusters are generally kept together within a syllable.

Geminate Consonant Rule

Geminate consonants remain within the same syllable.

Stress Rule

Stress falls on the penultimate syllable in many Italian words.

  • The inchoative suffix '-egg-' is historically significant. The palatalization of 'gg' to /d͡ʒ/ is a standard phonetic rule.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/8/2025
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