entertainmentgehalte
Syllables
en-ter-tai-nment-ge-halt-e
Pronunciation
/ˌɛntərˈtɛinməntɣəˈhaltə/
Stress
0010001
Morphemes
ge- + halte + entertainment
The word 'entertainmentgehalte' is a Dutch compound noun meaning 'entertainment value'. It is divided into seven syllables: en-ter-tai-nment-ge-halt-e, with primary stress on the penultimate syllable ('tai'). The word is morphologically composed of the English-derived 'entertainment', the German-derived prefix 'ge-', and the Dutch root 'halte'. Syllabification follows Dutch rules prioritizing open syllables and maintaining permissible consonant clusters.
Definitions
- 1
The degree to which something is entertaining.
Entertainment value
“Het entertainmentgehalte van de show was hoog.”
“De film had een laag entertainmentgehalte.”
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('tai'). The first, third, fifth, sixth and seventh syllables are unstressed.
Syllables
en — Open syllable, unstressed.. ter — Open syllable, unstressed.. tai — Closed syllable, primary stressed.. nment — Closed syllable, unstressed.. ge — Open syllable, unstressed. Prefix.. halt — Open syllable, unstressed.. e — Open syllable, unstressed. Schwa.
Word Parts
Open Syllable Preference
Dutch favors syllables ending in vowels whenever possible.
Consonant Cluster Rule
Permissible consonant clusters are kept together within a syllable.
Penultimate Stress
Primary stress falls on the second-to-last syllable.
- The 'nt' cluster is a common and permissible consonant cluster in Dutch and is therefore kept together.
- The schwa sound /ə/ in the final syllable is common in unstressed positions.
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