technologiøːrzen
Syllables
te-chno-lo-gi-øːr-zen
Pronunciation
/tɛk.no.lo.ɣi.ˈøːr.zən/
Stress
000101
Morphemes
technologie, beurzen
The word 'technologiebeurzen' is a compound noun in Dutch, divided into six syllables: te-chno-lo-gi-øːr-zen. Stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('gi'). Syllabification follows vowel peak principle, onset-rime structure, and penultimate stress rules, preserving consonant clusters where possible.
Definitions
- 1
Trade fairs or exhibitions focused on technology.
Technology fairs, technology exhibitions
“We bezochten de technologiebeurzen in Amsterdam.”
“De technologiebeurzen trekken veel investeerders aan.”
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('gi').
Syllables
te — Open syllable, initial syllable.. chno — Closed syllable.. lo — Open syllable.. gi — Closed syllable, stressed syllable.. øːr — Closed syllable.. zen — Closed syllable.
Vowel Peak Principle
Each syllable must contain a vowel sound.
Onset-Rime Structure
Syllables are structured around an onset and a rime.
Penultimate Stress
Primary stress falls on the second-to-last syllable.
Consonant Cluster Preservation
Consonant clusters are maintained unless they violate phonotactic constraints.
- The 'g' sound /ɣ/ is a common feature of Dutch and doesn't affect syllabification directly.
- The diphthong 'ie' is treated as a single vowel sound within a syllable.
- The 'rs' cluster is treated as a single unit in this case.
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