sbatacchiassimo
Syllables
s-ba-tac-chia-ssi-mo
Pronunciation
/sbatak.kjasˈsi.mo/
Stress
000110
Morphemes
bat- + -acchiassimo
The word 'sbatacchiassimo' is a complex Italian verb form syllabified as s-ba-tac-chia-ssi-mo, with primary stress on 'chia'. It's morphologically composed of a root *bat-* and several suffixes. Syllable division follows standard Italian rules based on sonority and CV structure, with minor considerations for geminate consonants.
Definitions
- 1
We would be flapping/beating repeatedly.
We would flap/beat.
“Noi sbatacchiassimo le ali per volare.”
“Quando eravamo bambini, sbatacchiassimo le mani per divertirci.”
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'chia' (1). All other syllables are unstressed (0).
Syllables
s — Open syllable, initial consonant.. ba — Open syllable, consonant-vowel.. tac — Open syllable, consonant-vowel.. chia — Open syllable, consonant-vowel, primary stress.. ssi — Closed syllable, geminate consonant-vowel.. mo — Open syllable, consonant-vowel.
Word Parts
Similar Words
Sonority Hierarchy
Consonant clusters are broken based on the sonority of the consonants, with the boundary falling between consonants of differing sonority.
Consonant-Vowel Structure
Syllables generally follow a consonant-vowel (CV) structure. Consonants are assigned to the syllable that follows them when possible.
Geminate Consonants
Geminate consonants typically belong to the following syllable, but vowel presence can influence the division.
- The geminate 'ss' presents a slight edge case, but the following vowel 'i' necessitates the division as 'ssi'.
- Regional variations might involve slight reduction of gemination, but this doesn't alter the core syllabification.
Nearby Words
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