burgerjournalistiek
Syllables
bur-ger-jour-na-list-iek
Pronunciation
/ˈbʏrɣərˌʒœr.na.listˈik/
Stress
0 1 0 0 0 1
Morphemes
burger, journalistiek
The word 'burgerjournalistiek' is a Dutch compound noun syllabified based on vowel sounds and consonant clusters. Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable '-jour-'. It consists of two roots, 'burger' and 'journalistiek', and represents citizen journalism.
Definitions
- 1
Journalism conducted by non-professional journalists; citizen journalism.
Citizen journalism
“De opkomst van burgerjournalistiek heeft de nieuwsvoorziening veranderd.”
“Via sociale media verspreidt burgerjournalistiek vaak snel informatie.”
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable '-jour-'. The final syllable '-iek' also receives some secondary stress, but is less prominent.
Syllables
bur — Open syllable, containing a short vowel and a consonant.. ger — Open syllable, containing a schwa-like vowel and a guttural consonant.. jour — Open syllable, containing a diphthong and a consonant. Primary stressed syllable.. na — Open syllable, containing a short vowel.. list — Closed syllable, containing a vowel and a consonant cluster.. iek — Closed syllable, containing a vowel and a consonant.
Vowel-centric Syllabification
Each vowel sound forms the nucleus of a syllable.
Consonant Cluster Handling
Consonant clusters are broken up based on sonority.
Compound Word Syllabification
Compound words are syllabified as if they were separate words joined together.
- The 'g' sound can have regional variations in pronunciation.
- The 'r' sound can be vocalized or reduced, influencing syllable boundaries.
- Dutch stress is generally on the penultimate syllable, but exceptions exist.
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