successiebelasting
Syllables
suc-ces-si-e-be-las-ting
Pronunciation
/sʏˈsɛsiˌbeːlɑstɪŋ/
Stress
0000110
Morphemes
suc- + last- + -ing
The Dutch word 'successiebelasting' (inheritance tax) is divided into seven syllables: suc-ces-si-e-be-las-ting. The primary stress falls on 'be-las-ting'. Syllabification follows Dutch rules of onset maximization and vowel-centric structure, aligning with morphemic boundaries. It's a compound noun formed from Latin and Dutch elements.
Definitions
- 1
Tax levied on the value of an inherited estate.
Inheritance tax
“De overheid heeft de successiebelasting verhoogd.”
“De hoogte van de successiebelasting is afhankelijk van de waarde van de erfenis.”
syn:erfbelasting
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the antepenultimate syllable 'be-las-ting'. The stress is relatively even across the compound, but 'be-las-ting' receives slightly more emphasis.
Syllables
suc — Open syllable, initial syllable.. ces — Closed syllable, contains a diphthong.. si — Open syllable, contains a vowel.. e — Open syllable, schwa sound.. be — Open syllable, stressed syllable.. las — Open syllable, part of the stressed unit.. ting — Closed syllable, final syllable.
Word Parts
Onset Maximization
Dutch prefers to maximize onsets (consonant-vowel combinations) when dividing syllables.
Vowel-Centric Syllabification
Each syllable generally contains a vowel sound.
Morpheme Boundaries
Syllable division often aligns with morpheme boundaries to enhance transparency.
- The compound nature of the word requires consideration of stress patterns in compounds.
- The 'ces' syllable is a closed syllable, but this is acceptable in Dutch, especially in loanwords and compounds.
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