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Word Analysis

konsentrasjonskrevende

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

7 syllables
22 characters
Norwegian Nynorsk
Enriched
7syllables

konsentrasjonskrevende

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

kon-sen-tras-jons-kre-ven-de

Pronunciation

/kɔnˈsɛntrɑʃɔnsˌkrɛvən̪de/

Stress

0 0 1 0 0 0 0

Morphemes

konsentrasjons- + krev- + -ende

The word 'konsentrasjonskrevende' is a complex Nynorsk adjective meaning 'concentration-demanding'. It is divided into seven syllables: kon-sen-tras-jons-kre-ven-de, with primary stress on 'tras'. The word is morphologically composed of a Latin-derived prefix, an Old Norse root, and an Old Norse suffix. Syllable division follows the principles of onset maximization and vowel sequencing.

Definitions

adjective
  1. 1

    Requiring a high degree of concentration; demanding attention and focus.

    Concentration-demanding, concentration-intensive.

    Dette er en konsentrasjonskrevende oppgave.

    Han fant arbeidet veldig konsentrasjonskrevende.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the third syllable ('tras'), following the rule of stressing the root syllable or the syllable immediately preceding a suffix.

Syllables

7
kon/kɔn/
sen/sɛn/
tras/trɑs/
jons/ʃɔns/
kre/krɛ/
ven/vɛn/
de/de/

kon Open syllable, initial syllable, onset consonant 'k', nucleus vowel 'o'.. sen Open syllable, onset consonant 's', nucleus vowel 'e'.. tras Closed syllable, onset consonant cluster 'tr', nucleus vowel 'a', coda consonant 's'.. jons Closed syllable, onset consonant 'ʃ', nucleus vowel 'o', coda consonant cluster 'ns'.. kre Open syllable, onset consonant cluster 'kr', nucleus vowel 'e'.. ven Open syllable, onset consonant 'v', nucleus vowel 'e'.. de Open syllable, onset consonant 'd', nucleus vowel 'e'.

Onset Maximization

Consonant clusters are kept together at the beginning of a syllable to maximize the onset.

Vowel Sequence Rule

Each vowel generally forms the nucleus of a separate syllable.

Stress Placement

Stress typically falls on the root syllable or the syllable immediately preceding a suffix.

  • The 'sj' cluster is treated as a single phoneme /ʃ/.
  • Regional variations in pronunciation of the final 'v' sound may exist.
  • The word's length and morphological complexity require careful application of syllable division rules.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/5/2025
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