misdaadjournaalisten
Syllables
mis-daad-jour-naa-lis-ten
Pronunciation
/mɪsˈdaːtʒuːrnaːlistən/
Stress
010010
Morphemes
mis + daad + journalisten
The Dutch word 'misdaadjournalisten' is a compound noun meaning 'crime journalists'. It is syllabified as mis-daad-jour-naa-lis-ten, with primary stress on 'lis'. The word is composed of the prefix 'mis-', the root 'daad', and the suffix '-journalisten'. Syllable division follows the onset-rime principle and the penultimate stress rule.
Definitions
- 1
People who report on crimes and criminal activity.
Crime journalists
“De misdaadjournalisten stonden klaar bij de rechtbank.”
“Misdaadjournalisten riskeren vaak hun leven.”
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('lis').
Syllables
mis — Closed syllable, onset 'm', rime 'is'. daad — Open syllable, long vowel 'aa'. jour — Open syllable, 'j' pronounced as /ʒ/. naa — Open syllable, long vowel 'aa'. lis — Closed syllable, primary stress. ten — Open syllable, schwa sound /ə/
Word Parts
Similar Words
Onset-Rime Principle
Syllables are formed around a vowel nucleus, with preceding consonants forming the onset and following consonants forming the rime.
Sonority Sequencing Principle
Consonant clusters are broken down based on sonority.
Penultimate Stress Rule
Dutch generally stresses the second-to-last syllable.
- Compound nature of the word.
- Long vowels ('aa') influence syllable weight.
- Final schwa sound (/ə/) is common in unstressed syllables.
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