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Word Analysis

spumantizzarono

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

6 syllables
15 characters
Italian
Enriched
6syllables

spumantizzarono

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

spu-man-ti-zza-ro-no

Pronunciation

/spuˈmantittsaroˈno/

Stress

000101

Morphemes

spum- + mant- + izzar-ono

The verb 'spumantizzarono' (they carbonated) is divided into six syllables: spu-man-ti-zza-ro-no, with stress on the penultimate syllable. It's formed from Latin roots and follows standard Italian CV-based syllabification rules, accounting for the geminate consonant.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    To make something sparkling, to carbonate.

    They made it sparkling / They carbonated it.

    Spumantizzarono il vino prima della festa.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('-ro-').

Syllables

6
spu/spu/
man/man/
ti/ti/
zza/tsa/
ro/ro/
no/no/

spu Open syllable, consonant-vowel structure.. man Closed syllable, consonant-vowel structure.. ti Open syllable, consonant-vowel structure.. zza Closed syllable, consonant-vowel structure with geminate consonant.. ro Open syllable, consonant-vowel structure.. no Open syllable, consonant-vowel structure.

Consonant-Vowel (CV)

Each consonant followed by a vowel forms a syllable.

Geminate Consonants

Geminate consonants are maintained within a syllable.

Stress Placement

Stress generally falls on the penultimate syllable.

  • The geminate 'zz' influences syllable weight.
  • The verb ending '-arono' is a standard past historic marker.
  • Regional variations in vowel articulation may exist but do not affect syllable division.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/7/2025
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