regimentscommandanten
Syllables
re-gi-ments-com-man-dan-ten
Pronunciation
/rəˈɣimɛnts kɔmaːn.dɑn.tə(n)/
Stress
0010010
Morphemes
command + anten
The word 'regimentscommandanten' is a Dutch compound noun divided into seven syllables: re-gi-ments-com-man-dan-ten. The primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('dan'). The word is formed from French and Germanic roots and suffixes, and its syllabification follows standard Dutch vowel-centric rules.
Definitions
- 1
Plural form indicating those in command of regiments.
Regiment commanders
“De regimentscommandanten gaven orders.”
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('dan').
Syllables
re — Open syllable, initial syllable.. gi — Open syllable.. ments — Closed syllable.. com — Open syllable.. man — Open syllable.. dan — Open, stressed syllable.. ten — Open syllable, final syllable.
Word Parts
Vowel-centric division
Syllables are built around vowel sounds, creating open syllables where possible.
Avoid stranded consonants
Consonants are assigned to the syllable they most naturally belong to, avoiding isolated consonants.
Compound word rules
Compound words are divided based on the individual morphemes that compose them.
- The 't' between 'regiments' and 'command' is pronounced but doesn't create a new syllable.
- The final '-en' is a plural marker and is often reduced in pronunciation.
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