rumoreggiatrici
Syllables
ru-mo-re-ggia-tri-ci
Pronunciation
/rumoreddʒjaˈtriːtʃi/
Stress
000111
Morphemes
ri- + rumore + -eggia-tri-ci
The word 'rumoreggiatrici' is a complex Italian adjective meaning 'noisy'. It is divided into six syllables: ru-mo-re-ggia-tri-ci, with primary stress on the penultimate syllable. It is formed from the root 'rumore' (noise) with several suffixes indicating iterative action and agentive function. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules regarding consonant clusters, vowel hiatus, and final consonants.
Definitions
- 1
Making a lot of noise; noisy. Describes something or someone that habitually makes a lot of noise.
Noisy, clamorous, rattling.
“Le macchine rumoreggiatrici disturbavano il vicinato.”
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('tri').
Syllables
ru — Open syllable, initial syllable.. mo — Open syllable.. re — Open syllable.. ggia — Syllable with geminate consonant, closed syllable.. tri — Open syllable, stressed syllable.. ci — Closed syllable, final syllable.
Word Parts
Similar Words
Consonant Clusters
Italian breaks consonant clusters after the first consonant if it creates a permissible syllable structure (e.g., 'ggia').
Vowel Hiatus
Vowel sequences are separated into distinct syllables.
Final Consonant
A single final consonant typically closes the syllable.
Geminate Consonants
Geminate consonants are generally maintained within a syllable.
- The iterative suffix '-egg-' is relatively uncommon but follows established morphological rules.
- The geminate 'gg' is a standard feature of Italian phonology.
Nearby Words
17 wordsTrending in Italian
Terms getting hyphenated by users right now.