dagbladjournalisten
Syllables
dag-blad-jour-na-lis-ten
Pronunciation
/ˈdɑx.blɑt.jɔr.naː.lɪs.tən/
Stress
000010
Morphemes
dag + blad, jour, naal + ist, en
The word 'dagbladjournalisten' is a compound noun syllabified into six syllables (dag-blad-jour-na-lis-ten) following the vowel-final syllable rule. Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'lis'. The word is composed of Germanic, French, and Latin/Greek morphemes.
Definitions
- 1
Journalists who work for daily newspapers.
Daily newspaper journalists
“De dagbladjournalisten stelden scherpe vragen tijdens de persconferentie.”
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'lis' (1). All other syllables are unstressed (0).
Syllables
dag — Open syllable, initial syllable.. blad — Open syllable.. jour — Open syllable.. na — Open syllable.. lis — Open syllable, primary stressed syllable.. ten — Open syllable, final syllable.
Word Parts
Similar Words
Vowel-Final Syllable Rule
Dutch syllables generally end in a vowel sound. Each vowel sound forms a separate syllable.
Compound Word Syllabification
Compound words are syllabified by breaking them down into their constituent morphemes and applying the vowel-final syllable rule to each morpheme.
- The compound nature of the word doesn't introduce unusual syllabification challenges. Regional pronunciation variations may exist but do not affect syllable division.
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