automatiseeringsterrein
Syllables
au-to-ma-ti-seer-ing-ster-rein
Pronunciation
/ˌɑutomaˈtiseːrɪŋstɛrɛin/
Stress
00001001
Morphemes
auto- + matiseer + -ingsterrein
The word 'automatiseringsterrein' is a Dutch compound noun divided into eight syllables (au-to-ma-ti-seer-ing-ster-rein) with stress on 'seer'. It's formed from the prefix 'auto-', root 'matiseer', and suffixes '-ingsterrein'. Syllabification follows vowel-consonant division and diphthong preservation rules.
Definitions
- 1
Area of automation
Automation area/field
“Het bedrijf investeert in een nieuw automatiseringsterrein.”
“Dit is een belangrijk automatiseringsterrein voor de toekomst.”
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'seer' (/seːr/). The stress pattern is typical for Dutch compound nouns.
Syllables
au — Open syllable, diphthong.. to — Open syllable, vowel followed by consonant.. ma — Open syllable, vowel followed by consonant.. ti — Open syllable, vowel followed by consonant.. seer — Closed syllable, stressed.. ing — Closed syllable, nasal consonant cluster.. ster — Closed syllable, consonant cluster.. rein — Open syllable, vowel followed by consonant.
Word Parts
Vowel-Consonant Division
Syllables are typically divided after vowels, unless part of a diphthong.
Diphthong Preservation
Diphthongs are kept within a single syllable.
Consonant Cluster Handling
Consonant clusters are generally maintained within a syllable, unless they create an unpronounceable sequence.
- The length of the word and its compounding nature are the main complexities.
- Dutch stress is generally fixed on the penultimate syllable, simplifying stress assignment.
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