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Word Analysis

kundeidentifikasjonsnummer

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

10 syllables
26 characters
Norwegian Nynorsk
Enriched
10syllables

kudeidentifikasjonsnummer

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

ku-de-i-den-ti-fi-kas-jons-num-mer

Pronunciation

/ˈkʉːnəɪ̯dɛntɪfɪkasjɔnsnʉmːər/

Stress

0000001000

Morphemes

kunde-identifikasjons-nummer

The word *kundeidentifikasjonsnummer* is a compound noun in Nynorsk, divided into ten syllables (ku-de-i-den-ti-fi-kas-jons-num-mer). Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable. The word is morphologically composed of three roots: 'kunde', 'identifikasjons', and 'nummer'. Syllabification follows the onset-rime principle and sonority sequencing, typical of Norwegian.

Definitions

noun
  1. 1

    A unique number assigned to a customer for identification purposes.

    Customer identification number

    Hugs kundeidentifikasjonsnummeret ditt.

    Vi treng kundeidentifikasjonsnummeret for å finne kontoen din.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'kasjons-'. This is typical for Norwegian compound nouns.

Syllables

10
ku/kʉː/
de/də/
i/ɪ/
den/dɛn/
ti/tɪ/
fi/fɪ/
kas/kas/
jons/jɔns/
num/nʉmː/
mer/mær/

ku Open syllable, onset /k/, rime /ʉː/. Stressed.. de Open syllable, onset /d/, rime /ə/.. i Open syllable, onset null, rime /ɪ/.. den Closed syllable, onset /d/, rime /ɛn/.. ti Open syllable, onset /t/, rime /ɪ/.. fi Open syllable, onset /f/, rime /ɪ/.. kas Closed syllable, onset /k/, rime /as/. Primary stress.. jons Closed syllable, onset /j/, rime /ɔns/.. num Closed syllable, onset /n/, rime /ʉmː/.. mer Open syllable, onset /m/, rime /ær/.

Onset-Rime Principle

Syllables are formed around a vowel nucleus, with preceding consonants forming the onset and following consonants forming the rime.

Sonority Sequencing Principle

Consonant clusters are broken down based on sonority, with more sonorous sounds tending to form syllable peaks.

Compound Word Syllabification

Compound words are generally syllabified as if they were separate words joined together.

  • The *ks* and *sj* consonant clusters are common and do not pose syllable division challenges.
  • Regional variations in vowel pronunciation (e.g., /ʉː/ vs. /yː/) do not affect syllable division.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/5/2025
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