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Word Analysis

krigsrisikoforsikring

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

11 syllables
21 characters
Norwegian Nynorsk
Enriched
11syllables

krigsrisikoforsikringkrigsrisikring

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

krigs-ri-si-ko-for-si-kring-krigs-ri-sik-ring

Pronunciation

/ˈkriːɡsɾɪsɪkɔfɔʂˈkriːŋ/

Stress

1000100101

Morphemes

krigs- + risiko- + -forsikring

The word 'krigsrisikoforsikring' is a compound noun in Norwegian Nynorsk. Syllabification follows the principles of onset maximization and vowel-nucleus requirements, resulting in a division of 'krigs-ri-si-ko-for-si-kring-krigs-ri-sik-ring'. Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'sik'. The word is morphologically composed of the prefix 'krigs-', the root 'risiko-', and the suffix '-forsikring'.

Definitions

noun
  1. 1

    Insurance covering losses due to war.

    War risk insurance

    Selskapet tilbyr krigsrisikoforsikring for skip i farlige farvann.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'sik' (1). Secondary stress on 'krigs' (1). Other syllables are unstressed (0).

Syllables

11
krigs/kriːɡs/
ri/ɾɪ/
si/sɪ/
ko/kɔ/
for/fɔɾ/
si/sɪ/
kring/kriːŋ/
krigs/kriːɡs/
ri/ɾɪ/
sik/sɪk/
ring/riŋ/

krigs Closed syllable, initial consonant cluster 'kr', stressed.. ri Open syllable, vowel 'i'.. si Open syllable, vowel 'i'. ko Open syllable, vowel 'o'. for Open syllable, vowel 'o' and 'r'. si Open syllable, vowel 'i'. kring Closed syllable, vowel 'i' and 'ng'. krigs Closed syllable, vowel 'i' and 'gs'. ri Open syllable, vowel 'i'. sik Closed syllable, vowel 'i' and 'k', primary stress.. ring Closed syllable, vowel 'i' and 'ng'

Onset Maximization

Consonants are assigned to the following vowel to create a permissible onset, avoiding consonant clusters at the beginning of a syllable where possible.

Vowel as Syllable Nucleus

Each syllable must contain a vowel, which serves as the nucleus.

Avoid Stranded Consonants

Consonants are not left at the end of a syllable unless they are part of a permissible coda.

  • Compound words in Nynorsk can exhibit regional variations in stress placement.
  • The pronunciation of 'r' can vary slightly depending on dialect.
  • The word is exclusively a noun, so syllabification does not change based on grammatical function.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/6/2025
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