soprassederanno
Syllables
so-pra-sse-de-ran-no
Pronunciation
/soprassedeˈranno/
Stress
000011
Morphemes
sopra + sede + ranno
The word 'soprassederanno' is a future tense verb form syllabified as 'so-pra-sse-de-ran-no' with stress on the penultimate syllable. It's composed of the prefix 'sopra-', root 'sede-', and suffix '-ranno'. Syllabification follows standard Italian rules, prioritizing vowel separation and avoiding single intervocalic consonants.
Definitions
- 1
To overlook, to disregard, to pass over, to ignore.
They will overlook/ignore/disregard.
“I miei genitori soprassederanno ai miei errori.”
“Il giudice soprassederà a questa piccola infrazione.”
Stress pattern
The primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'no' (ran-**no**). The stress pattern is typical for Italian verbs in the future tense.
Syllables
so — Open syllable, initial syllable.. pra — Open syllable.. sse — Closed syllable, geminate consonant.. de — Open syllable.. ran — Open syllable.. no — Closed syllable, stressed syllable.
Word Parts
sopra
Latin *super-* meaning 'over, above'. Prefixes the verb to indicate action performed over something.
sede
From Latin *sedēre* meaning 'to sit', but in this context related to 'attend to, overlook'. The root carries the core meaning of the verb.
ranno
Future tense ending for the 3rd person plural. Indicates future tense and person/number agreement.
Vowel Clusters
Vowel clusters are generally broken up into separate syllables (e.g., 'so-pra').
Consonant Clusters
Consonant clusters are broken up according to sonority, with less sonorous consonants tending to attach to the following vowel (e.g., 'se-de').
Avoid Single Intervocalic Consonants
A single consonant between vowels is usually attached to the vowel that follows it (e.g., 'so-pra-sse').
Geminate Consonants
Geminate consonants (double consonants) are generally maintained within a syllable (e.g., 'sopra-ss-').
- The word's length and complex morphology require careful application of the rules.
- The 'ss' cluster is a common feature in Italian and doesn't disrupt the standard syllabification.
Nearby Words
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