incidentenjournalistiek
Syllables
in-ci-den-ten-jour-na-list-iek
Pronunciation
/ɪn.siˈdɛn.tə̃.ʒu.r.naˈlist.ik/
Stress
00000011
Morphemes
incident + journalistiek
The word 'incidentenjournalistiek' is a compound noun syllabified based on vowel sounds, avoiding stranded consonants. Stress falls on the penultimate syllable. It's composed of 'incidenten' (incidents) and 'journalistiek' (journalism). The syllabification follows standard Dutch rules for compound words and consonant clusters.
Definitions
- 1
Journalism that focuses on reporting on incidents, often involving crime, accidents, or unexpected events.
Incident journalism
“De laatste tijd is er veel kritiek op de incidentenjournalistiek.”
“Incidentenjournalistiek kan leiden tot sensatiezucht.”
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('-iek' in 'journalistiek').
Syllables
in — Open syllable, initial syllable.. ci — Open syllable.. den — Closed syllable.. ten — Closed syllable, nasal vowel.. jour — Open syllable.. na — Open syllable.. list — Closed syllable.. iek — Closed syllable, stressed.
Word Parts
Vowel-Based Syllabification
Each vowel sound generally forms the nucleus of a syllable.
Avoid Stranded Consonants
Consonants are generally assigned to the syllable that follows the vowel sound.
Compound Word Syllabification
Compound words are syllabified as if they were separate words joined together.
- The 'nt' and 'st' consonant clusters are common in Dutch and don't pose significant syllabification challenges.
- Regional variations in pronunciation might slightly affect vowel reduction, but not syllable boundaries.
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