restaurantgedeelte
Syllables
res-tau-rant-ge-deel-te
Pronunciation
/rɛs.toː.rɑ̃.tə.ɣəˈdeːltə/
Stress
010010
Morphemes
ge + restaurant + deelte
The word 'restaurantgedeelte' is a compound noun syllabified based on maximizing onsets and adhering to CV/VC structures. Primary stress falls on 'tau' in 'restaurant', and secondary stress on 'ge' in 'gedeelte'. The word is morphologically composed of a French-derived root ('restaurant'), a Dutch prefix ('ge'), and a Dutch root ('deelte').
Definitions
- 1
A section or part of a restaurant.
Restaurant section/part
“We zaten in het rookvrije restaurantgedeelte.”
“Het restaurantgedeelte was volledig volgeboekt.”
Stress pattern
Primary stress on the penultimate syllable of 'restaurant' ('tau'), secondary stress on the first syllable of 'gedeelte' ('ge').
Syllables
res — Open syllable, consonant-vowel structure.. tau — Open syllable, consonant-vowel structure.. rant — Nasalized vowel followed by a consonant.. ge — Open syllable, consonant-schwa structure.. deel — Open syllable, consonant-vowel structure.. te — Open syllable, consonant-schwa structure.
Word Parts
Maximize Onsets
Syllables are formed to maximize the number of consonants in the onset position.
Consonant-Vowel (CV) Structure
The most basic syllable structure in Dutch is a consonant followed by a vowel.
Consonant-Schwa (Cə) Structure
Unstressed syllables often consist of a consonant followed by a schwa vowel.
- The 'g' can be pronounced as /ɣ/ or /χ/ depending on the region, but this doesn't affect syllabification.
- Nasalization of vowels before nasal consonants is a common feature.
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