familiegeschiedenissen
Syllables
fa-mi-lie-ge-schie-de-nis-sen
Pronunciation
/faˈmilɪɣəˈʃidənɪsən/
Stress
00010010
Morphemes
familie + geschiedenis-sen
The word 'familiegeschiedenissen' is a complex Dutch noun divided into eight syllables with stress on the fourth. Syllabification follows vowel-based rules, accommodating consonant clusters. Its morphemic structure reveals Latin and Greek origins.
Definitions
- 1
Family histories
Family histories
“Ze bestudeerde de familiegeschiedenissen om haar afkomst te begrijpen.”
“De bibliotheek bewaart een uitgebreide collectie familiegeschiedenissen.”
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the fourth syllable ('nis'). Dutch stress generally falls on the penultimate syllable, but compounding and suffixes can shift it.
Syllables
fa — Open syllable, vowel ending.. mi — Open syllable, vowel ending.. lie — Open syllable, vowel ending.. ge — Open syllable, vowel ending.. schie — Closed syllable, consonant cluster 'sch' as onset.. de — Open syllable, vowel ending.. nis — Closed syllable, consonant ending, stressed syllable.. sen — Open syllable, vowel ending.
Word Parts
Vowel-Based Division
Syllables generally end in a vowel sound.
Consonant Cluster Handling
Consonant clusters are maintained within syllables unless they can be naturally split based on sonority.
Compounding & Suffixation
These influence stress placement.
- Regional variations in pronunciation might affect vowel realization, but not syllabification.
- The 'ge-' prefix can sometimes be pronounced as /xə/ in certain dialects.
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