strameriterrebbe
Syllables
stra-me-ri-te-rre-bbe
Pronunciation
/stra.me.riˈtɛr.rebbe/
Stress
001001
Morphemes
stra- + merit- + -erebbe
The word 'strameriterebbe' is a third-person singular conditional form of the verb 'strameritare'. It is divided into six syllables: stra-me-ri-te-rre-bbe, with stress on the penultimate syllable 'ri'. The syllabification follows standard Italian rules for consonant clusters, vowel-consonant structures, and geminate consonants. The word's morphemic structure consists of the prefix 'stra-', the root 'merit-', and the conditional suffix '-erebbe'.
Definitions
- 1
To richly deserve, to be highly worthy of.
To richly deserve
“Se lo strameriterebbe dopo tanti sacrifici.”
“He richly deserves it after so many sacrifices.”
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('ri').
Syllables
stra — Open syllable, consonant cluster at the beginning.. me — Open syllable, simple vowel-consonant structure.. ri — Stressed, open syllable.. te — Open syllable.. rre — Open syllable, geminated consonant.. bbe — Open syllable, conditional ending.
Word Parts
Similar Words
Consonant Cluster Division
Consonant clusters are broken after the first consonant if it's part of a permissible onset (e.g., 'str-' becomes 'stra-').
Vowel-Consonant Syllable
A vowel followed by a consonant typically forms a single syllable (e.g., 'me', 'ri', 'te').
Geminate Consonant
Geminate consonants (double consonants) are treated as a single consonant for syllabification, but their length is phonetically significant.
Penultimate Stress
In Italian, words ending in a vowel are generally stressed on the penultimate syllable.
- The verb 'strameritare' is relatively literary.
- Gemination of 'rr' affects pronunciation but not syllabification.
- Regional variations in vowel quality may exist.
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