bakkerijpatriseri
Syllables
bak-ke-rij-pa-tri-se-ri
Pronunciation
/ˈbɑkərɛi̯.pa.tʁi.səˈri/
Stress
0101011
Morphemes
bakker, patisserie + -ij
The word 'bakkerij-patisserie' is a compound noun syllabified according to Dutch rules, prioritizing open syllables and maintaining the stress patterns of its components. It consists of 'bakkerij' (bakery) and 'patisserie' (pastry shop), with stress on the penultimate syllable of each part.
Definitions
- 1
A combined bakery and pastry shop.
Bakery-pastry shop
“We kochten een heerlijke taart bij de bakkerij-patisserie.”
syn:gebakswinkel
Stress pattern
Primary stress on the 'rij' syllable in 'bakkerij' and 'ri' syllable in 'patisserie' (penultimate syllable stress).
Syllables
bak — Open syllable, initial consonant.. ke — Open syllable, schwa vowel.. rij — Diphthong, stressed syllable.. pa — Open syllable, initial consonant.. tri — Open syllable, rhotic consonant.. se — Open syllable, schwa vowel.. ri — Open syllable, stressed syllable.
Similar Words
Open Syllable Preference
Dutch favors open syllables, leading to divisions like 'bak-ke' instead of 'bak-ker'.
Compound Word Syllabification
Compound words are treated as separate units, maintaining the syllabification of each component.
Vowel Combination
Diphthongs and vowel combinations are kept together within a single syllable.
- The French loanword 'patisserie' is integrated into Dutch syllabification rules. The hyphen is crucial for maintaining separate stress patterns.
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