accijnsgoederenplaatsen
Syllables
ac-cijns-goe-de-ren-plaats-en
Pronunciation
/aˈkɛi̯nsɣuːdəɾənˈplaːtsə(n)/
Stress
000011
Morphemes
accijns + goederen + plaatsen
The word 'accijnsgoederenplaatsen' is a Dutch noun formed by compounding. Syllabification follows Dutch rules favoring open syllables and avoiding breaking consonant clusters. Stress falls on the penultimate syllable. The word refers to locations for excise goods.
Definitions
- 1
Places where excise goods are stored or traded.
Excise goods locations / places for excise goods.
“De douane controleerde de accijnsgoederenplaatsen.”
“Er zijn strenge regels voor accijnsgoederenplaatsen.”
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('plaatsen').
Syllables
ac — Open syllable, initial syllable.. cijns — Open syllable, contains a diphthong.. goe — Open syllable, part of the root.. de — Open syllable, part of the root.. ren — Closed syllable, plural marker.. plaats — Closed syllable, stressed syllable.. en — Open syllable, plural marker.
Word Parts
Open Syllable Preference
Dutch favors open syllables (CV) whenever possible.
Consonant Cluster Avoidance
Consonant clusters are generally kept together within a syllable unless they are complex.
Compound Word Stress
In compound words, stress often falls on the penultimate syllable.
- The 'ij' digraph is treated as a single vowel sound. The 'ns' cluster is common and usually kept together.
Nearby Words
17 wordsTrending in Dutch
Terms getting hyphenated by users right now.
- ic-infrastructuur
- abdiceer
- Abchazië
- abcessen
- Abbekerk
- abc-boek
- Abbeweer
- abubakar
- abrikoos
- abattoir
- absoute
- abdellah
- abdullah
- abdallah
- absurds
- absurde
- abusief
- abuizen
- absente
- absence