compartimenteringenen
Syllables
com-par-ti-men-te-rin-ge-nen
Pronunciation
/kɔm.par.ti.mɛn.tə.ˈrin.ɣə.nən/
Stress
00001000
Morphemes
com + parti + menteringen
The word 'compartimenteringen' is a complex Dutch noun derived from French and Latin roots. It is divided into eight syllables based on maximizing onsets and vowel-centered structures, with primary stress on the antepenultimate syllable 'te'. The word's morphology includes prefixes and multiple suffixes indicating a process or result of compartmentalization.
Definitions
- 1
The act or result of dividing something into compartments; compartmentalizations.
Compartmentalizations
“De compartimenteringen in het magazijn zorgden voor een efficiënte opslag.”
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the antepenultimate syllable 'te'.
Syllables
com — Closed syllable, onset 'k'. par — Closed syllable, onset 'p'. ti — Open syllable, onset 't'. men — Open syllable, onset 'm'. te — Open syllable, onset 't', primary stress. rin — Open syllable, onset 'r'. ge — Open syllable, onset 'ɣ'. nen — Open syllable, onset 'n'
Word Parts
Onset Maximization
Consonant clusters are broken to maximize the number of consonants in the onset of each syllable.
Vowel-Centered Syllables
Each syllable contains a vowel sound, forming the nucleus.
- Dutch allows for complex consonant clusters, but syllabification aims to respect phonotactic constraints.
- The 'ment' cluster is commonly split as 'men-te' to avoid illegal syllable structures.
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