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Word Analysis

fylkeslandbrukssjef

Complete linguistic analysis including syllable division, pronunciation, morphology, and definitions.

5 syllables
19 characters
Norwegian Nynorsk
Enriched
5syllables

fylkeslandbrukssjef

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

fyl-kes-land-bruk-ssjef

Pronunciation

/fʏlːkəsˈlandbrʊksʃeːf/

Stress

00011

Morphemes

fylkes- + landbruk- + ssjef

The word 'fylkeslandbrukssjef' is a compound noun in Nynorsk, divided into five syllables: fyl-kes-land-bruk-ssjef. Stress falls on 'bruk'. Syllabification follows rules of onset maximization and vowel break, respecting morpheme boundaries. The word means 'county agricultural chief'.

Definitions

noun
  1. 1

    County agricultural chief; the person responsible for agricultural affairs within a county.

    County agricultural chief

    Fylkeslandbrukssjefen la fram ein ny strategi.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'bruk'. The stress pattern is typical for Norwegian compound nouns.

Syllables

5
fyl/fʏl/
kes/kəs/
land/land/
bruk/brʊk/
ssjef/ʃeːf/

fyl Open syllable, onset 'f', nucleus 'ʏ', coda null. Initial syllable.. kes Closed syllable, onset 'k', nucleus 'ə', coda 's'. Follows vowel break.. land Open syllable, onset 'l', nucleus 'a', coda 'nd'. Root syllable.. bruk Closed syllable, onset 'br', nucleus 'ʊ', coda 'k'. Stressed syllable.. ssjef Closed syllable, onset 'ʃ', nucleus 'eː', coda 'f'. Suffix syllable.

Onset Maximization

Consonant clusters are kept together at the beginning of a syllable whenever possible.

Vowel Break

Syllables are typically divided after vowels.

Geminate Consonant Handling

Geminate consonants are usually kept within the same syllable.

Compound Word Syllabification

Compound words are divided based on the constituent morphemes, respecting the other rules.

  • The 'ss' cluster could potentially be divided differently, but maintaining it within the 'ssjef' syllable aligns with maximizing onsets and preserving the morpheme boundary.
  • Regional variations in vowel pronunciation might exist, but do not affect the syllable division.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/7/2025
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