selectietrainingen
Syllables
se-lec-tie-trai-nin-gen
Pronunciation
/səˈlɛkti.trɛi̯.nɪŋ.ɣən/
Stress
000100
Morphemes
selectie + train + ingen
The word 'selectietrainingen' is a Dutch compound noun divided into six syllables: se-lec-tie-trai-nin-gen. The primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'trai'. It's formed from the Latin-derived 'selectie' (selection), the Germanic 'train' (to train), and the Dutch plural suffix 'ingen'. Syllabification follows vowel-centered rules, avoiding diphthong splitting and handling consonant clusters according to sonority.
Definitions
- 1
Selection trainings / Selection practices
Selection trainings / Selection practices
“De selectietrainingen waren erg intensief.”
“Hij nam deel aan de selectietrainingen voor het nationale team.”
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'trai'.
Syllables
se — Open syllable, unstressed.. lec — Closed syllable, unstressed.. tie — Open syllable, unstressed.. trai — Diphthong, primary stressed syllable.. nin — Closed syllable, unstressed.. gen — Open syllable, unstressed.
Word Parts
Similar Words
Vowel-Centered Syllabification
Each syllable contains a vowel sound.
Avoid Diphthong Splitting
Diphthongs are kept together within a single syllable.
Consonant Cluster Handling
Consonant clusters are split based on sonority, but preference is given to keeping them intact if phonotactically permissible.
Suffix Separation
Suffixes are typically separated into their own syllables.
- The 'ie' digraph is always a single syllable.
- The final 'n' before 'gen' doesn't affect syllable division.
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