acceptatieproblemen
Syllables
ac-cep-ta-tie-pro-ble-men
Pronunciation
/ɑk.sɛp.taˈti.ə.pro.ˈblɛ.mən/
Stress
0001010
Morphemes
ac + cept + atieproblemen
The Dutch word 'acceptatieproblemen' (acceptance problems) is syllabified as ac-cep-ta-tie-pro-ble-men, with primary stress on 'tie'. It's a compound noun formed from Latin roots and Dutch suffixes, following standard Dutch syllabification rules.
Definitions
- 1
Problems with acceptance
Acceptance problems
“De immigranten ondervinden vaak acceptatieproblemen.”
“Zijn acceptatieproblemen leidden tot depressie.”
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'tie' (1). Secondary stress on 'ble' (1). All other syllables are unstressed (0).
Syllables
ac — Open syllable, initial syllable.. cep — Closed syllable, contains a short vowel.. ta — Open syllable, relatively unstressed.. tie — Diphthong-containing syllable, primary stress.. pro — Open syllable, relatively unstressed.. ble — Closed syllable, secondary stress.. men — Open syllable, final syllable.
Word Parts
Vowel-Based Division
Syllables are generally formed around vowel sounds.
Avoid Diphthong Splitting
Diphthongs are kept within a single syllable.
Consonant Cluster Handling
Consonant clusters are divided based on sonority.
Compound Word Syllabification
Each component of a compound word is syllabified independently.
- The 'tie' syllable is a potential point of variation, but keeping it intact is standard.
- Regional variations in the pronunciation of 'pro' do not affect syllabification.
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