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0110” Stress Pattern in Dutch

Browse Dutch words with the “0110” rhythmic stress pattern, complete with pronunciations, syllable breakdowns, and linguistic insights.

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0110

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7 words

0110 Primary stress falls on the second syllable of 'Lieve' and on 'Vrouwe'. 'Onze' and 'straat' are unstressed.

Onze Lieve Vrouwestraat
6 syllables23 letters
On·ze Li·e·ve Vrou·we·straat
/ˈɔn.zə ˈli.və ˈvrɑu̯.stʁaːt/
noun

The word 'Onze Lieve Vrouwestraat' is a Dutch compound noun divided into four syllables: On-ze, Li-e-ve, Vrou-we-straat. Stress falls on 'Li' in 'Lieve' and on 'Vrouwe'. Syllabification follows Dutch rules of vowel separation and avoiding consonant cluster breaks.

Prins Alexanderstraat
6 syllables21 letters
Prins·A·lex·an·der·straat
/prɪns ɑlɛksɑndərstraat/
noun

The word 'Prins Alexanderstraat' is a Dutch compound noun syllabified as Prins-A-lex-an-der-straat. Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable of 'Alexander'. The syllabification follows Dutch rules favoring open syllables and avoiding consonant clusters.

Van Blankenburgstraat
5 syllables21 letters
Van·Blan·ken·burg·straat
/vɑn ˈblɑŋkənbʏrxstraːt/
noun

The word 'Van Blankenburgstraat' is a Dutch compound noun divided into five syllables: Van-Blan-ken-burg-straat. Stress falls on 'burg'. Syllable division follows the rule of forming syllables around vowel nuclei, dividing before vowels and allowing sonorant consonants to remain with the preceding syllable. The word consists of a preposition, a proper noun, and a common noun, all contributing to its meaning as a street name.

gevechtsvliegtuigen
4 syllables19 letters
ge·vechts·vliegtui·gen
/ɣəˈvɛxtsflixˌtœyɣə(n)/
noun

The word 'gevechtsvliegtuigen' is divided into four syllables: ge-vechts-vliegtui-gen. The primary stress falls on 'vliegtui'. The syllabification follows Dutch rules of maximizing onsets and ensuring each syllable has a vowel nucleus. The word is a compound noun consisting of a prefix, root, and suffixes.

identiteitsprobleem
6 syllables19 letters
i·den·ti·teit·spro·bleem
/ɪ.dɛn.tɪˈtɛit.spro.bleːm/
noun

The word 'identiteitsprobleem' is a Dutch compound noun divided into four syllables: i-den-ti-teit-spro-bleem. The primary stress falls on 'teit'. It's formed from Latin and Dutch morphemes and follows standard Dutch syllabification rules based on vowel nuclei and consonant cluster maintenance.

overwinteringsplekken
7 syllables21 letters
o·ver·win·te·rings·plek·ken
/oːvərˈʋɪntərɪŋsˌplɛkə(n)/
noun

The word 'overwinteringsplekken' is a compound noun divided into syllables based on Dutch open syllable preference and morpheme boundaries. The primary stress falls on the third syllable ('rings'). It consists of the prefix 'over-', the root 'winter-', the suffix '-ings', the root 'plek-', and the suffix '-ken'. It refers to places where animals spend the winter.

transportbrandstof
4 syllables18 letters
trans·port·brand·stof
/trɑ̃sˈpɔrtˈbrɑndstɔf/
noun

The word 'transportbrandstof' is a compound noun divided into four syllables: trans-port-brand-stof. The primary stress falls on 'brand'. It consists of a Latin-derived prefix 'transport-', a Germanic root 'brand-', and a Germanic suffix '-stof'. Syllabification follows vowel-based rules and preserves consonant clusters and diphthongs.