bedrijfshuisvestiging
Syllables
be-drijf-shuis-ves-ti-ging
Pronunciation
/bəˈdrɛifʃœysˈvɛstɪɣɪŋ/
Stress
011000
Morphemes
bedrijf, huis, vestiging
The word 'bedrijfshuisvesting' is a Dutch compound noun syllabified as 'be-drijf-shuis-ves-ti-ging', with primary stress on 'drijf' and 'huis'. It follows Dutch rules favoring open syllables and treating consonant clusters as units. The morphemic breakdown reveals three root components: 'bedrijf', 'huis', and 'vestiging'.
Definitions
- 1
Commercial property, business accommodation, premises for a company.
Business accommodation, commercial property
“Ze zoeken een nieuwe bedrijfshuisvesting in de stad.”
“De bedrijfshuisvesting is modern en energiezuinig.”
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the second syllable ('drijf') and the fifth syllable ('huis').
Syllables
be — Open syllable, unstressed.. drijf — Closed syllable, stressed.. shuis — Diphthong, stressed.. ves — Open syllable, unstressed.. ti — Open syllable, unstressed.. ging — Closed syllable, unstressed.
Open Syllable Preference
Dutch favors creating open syllables (CV) whenever possible.
Consonant Cluster Treatment
Consonant clusters like 'sch' and 'st' are generally treated as single units within a syllable.
Compound Word Syllabification
Compound words are syllabified by applying the rules to each component, then concatenating the resulting syllables.
Penultimate Stress
The primary stress typically falls on the penultimate syllable in Dutch words.
- The length of the word and the presence of multiple compound elements require careful application of the open syllable preference.
- Regional variations in pronunciation might slightly alter the stress pattern, but the core syllabification remains consistent.
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