sinasapellimonade
Syllables
si-na-sa-pel-li-mo-na-de
Pronunciation
/si.naː.sɑ.pəl.li.mo.naː.də/
Stress
01000100
Morphemes
sinaasappel, limonade
The word *sinaasappellimonade* is a Dutch compound noun divided into eight syllables: si-na-sa-pel-li-mo-na-de. The primary stress falls on the second syllable ('na'). Syllabification follows vowel-centered rules, avoiding stranded consonants, and adheres to the typical penultimate stress pattern of Dutch compound nouns.
Definitions
- 1
A beverage made from orange juice and water, often sweetened.
Orange lemonade
“Ik drink graag sinaasappellimonade.”
“De sinaasappellimonade was heerlijk.”
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the second syllable ('na'). Dutch generally stresses the penultimate syllable in compound words.
Syllables
si — Open syllable, initial syllable.. na — Open syllable, stressed syllable.. sa — Open syllable.. pel — Closed syllable.. li — Open syllable.. mo — Open syllable.. na — Open syllable.. de — Open syllable, final syllable.
Similar Words
Vowel-Centered Syllabification
Each syllable contains a vowel sound, forming the nucleus of the syllable.
Avoid Stranded Consonants
Consonants are assigned to the syllable where they can be most naturally pronounced, avoiding consonant clusters at syllable boundaries where possible.
Penultimate Stress
Primary stress falls on the second-to-last syllable in compound nouns.
- Vowel length variations due to regional dialects do not significantly alter the syllabification.
- The compound structure dictates the syllable division, prioritizing the individual morphemes.
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