inschrijvingsbiljet
Syllables
in-schrij-vings-bil-jet
Pronunciation
/ɪnˈsxrɛi̯vɪŋsˈbɪl.jɛt/
Stress
01001
Morphemes
in- + schrijv- + -ingsbiljet
The Dutch word 'inschrijvingsbiljet' is a compound noun with five syllables, divided as 'in-schrij-vings-bil-jet'. It features a complex morphemic structure with a Latin prefix, a Germanic root, and a French-derived suffix. Primary stress falls on the antepenultimate syllable ('schrijv'). Syllabification follows Dutch rules of onset maximization and vowel peak.
Definitions
- 1
A form or ticket for registration.
Registration form/ticket
“Ik heb het inschrijvingsbiljet ingevuld.”
“Kunt u mij een inschrijvingsbiljet geven?”
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the antepenultimate syllable ('schrijv'). The final syllable ('jet') also receives secondary stress, though less prominent.
Syllables
in — Open syllable, unstressed.. schrij — Closed syllable, stressed.. vings — Closed syllable, unstressed.. bil — Open syllable, unstressed.. jet — Closed syllable, stressed.
Word Parts
Onset Maximization
Dutch prefers to maximize the number of consonants in the onset of a syllable (e.g., 'schr').
Vowel Peak
Each syllable must contain a vowel peak.
Sonority Sequencing Principle
Consonants within a syllable are ordered according to sonority.
Compound Word Syllabification
Compound words are generally syllabified as if they were separate words joined together.
- The 'sch' cluster is treated as a single unit.
- Vowel reduction (schwa sounds) influences perceived syllable boundaries.
Nearby Words
17 wordsTrending in Dutch
Terms getting hyphenated by users right now.
- ic-infrastructuur
- abdiceer
- Abchazië
- abcessen
- Abbekerk
- abc-boek
- Abbeweer
- abubakar
- abrikoos
- abattoir
- absoute
- abdellah
- abdullah
- abdallah
- absurds
- absurde
- abusief
- abuizen
- absente
- absence