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Word Analysis

antinarcoticabrigaden

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

9 syllables
21 characters
Dutch
Enriched
9syllables

antinarkotikabrigaden

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

an-ti-nar-ko-ti-ka-bri-ga-den

Pronunciation

/ɑn.ti.nɑr.ko.ti.ka.bri.ɣa.də(n)/

Stress

000001000

Morphemes

anti- + narcotica- + -brigaden

The Dutch word 'antinarcoticabrigaden' is divided into nine syllables based on vowel-consonant division, with primary stress on the penultimate syllable 'ka'. It's a compound noun formed from Latin, French, and Dutch morphemes, meaning 'anti-narcotics brigades'. Syllabification follows standard Dutch rules prioritizing open syllables.

Definitions

noun
  1. 1

    Specialized police or military units dedicated to combating drug trafficking.

    Anti-narcotics brigades

    De antinarcoticabrigaden hebben een grote zending drugs onderschept.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'ka' (ti-ka). Dutch generally stresses the penultimate syllable.

Syllables

9
an/ɑn/
ti/ti/
nar/nɑr/
ko/ko/
ti/ti/
ka/ka/
bri/bri/
ga/ɣa/
den/də(n)/

an Open syllable, vowel followed by consonant. Unstressed.. ti Open syllable, vowel followed by consonant. Unstressed.. nar Open syllable, vowel followed by consonant. Unstressed.. ko Open syllable, vowel followed by consonant. Unstressed.. ti Open syllable, vowel followed by consonant. Unstressed.. ka Open syllable, vowel followed by consonant. Primary stressed syllable.. bri Open syllable, vowel followed by consonant. Unstressed.. ga Open syllable, vowel followed by consonant. Unstressed.. den Syllable ending in consonant cluster. Unstressed.

Vowel-Consonant Division

Dutch syllabification prioritizes creating open syllables (syllables ending in a vowel). Therefore, syllables are typically divided after each vowel sound.

Consonant Cluster Maintenance

Consonant clusters are generally maintained within syllables unless they create an unpronounceable sequence.

  • The word is a compound noun, which is common in Dutch and influences its length and syllable structure.
  • The final '-n' is a standard Dutch plural marker and doesn't introduce any unusual syllabification challenges.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/8/2025

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