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Word Analysis

landslagskarriere

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

6 syllables
17 characters
Norwegian Nynorsk
Enriched
6syllables

landslagskarriere

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

land-slag-ska-rri-e-re

Pronunciation

/ˈlɑnːsˌlɑɡskaˈrɪːrə/

Stress

010001

Morphemes

landslagskarriere

The word 'landslagskarriere' is divided into six syllables: land-slag-ska-rri-e-re. The primary stress falls on 'slag'. The word is a compound noun consisting of 'land', 'slag', and 'karriere', with syllable division following the principles of onset maximization and vowel sequence rules common in Nynorsk.

Definitions

noun
  1. 1

    A career playing for the national team (in sports).

    National team career

    Han hadde ein lang og suksessfull landslagskarriere.

    Ho avslutta si landslagskarriere etter VM.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the second syllable ('slag'). The stress pattern is typical for compound words in Nynorsk, where the second element receives the primary stress.

Syllables

6
land/lɑnː/
slag/slɑɡ/
ska/skɑ/
rri/rɪː/
e/ə/
re/rə/

land Open syllable, containing a long vowel and a nasal consonant. The onset is a single consonant.. slag Closed syllable, containing a vowel and a final consonant. The onset is a consonant cluster.. ska Open syllable, containing a vowel and a consonant cluster as the onset.. rri Open syllable, containing a vowel and a rhotic consonant. The 'rr' represents a geminate consonant.. e Open syllable, containing a schwa vowel. This is a weak syllable.. re Open syllable, containing a schwa vowel and a rhotic consonant.

Onset Maximization

Consonant clusters (e.g., 'sl', 'sk') 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, leading to the division between 'ska' and 'rri'.

Compound Word Rule

Syllable division often occurs between the constituent parts of a compound word, such as between 'land' and 'slag'.

  • Regional variations in the pronunciation of 'r' (e.g., trilled vs. uvular) do not affect the syllable division.
  • The geminate 'rr' is treated as a single consonant in terms of syllable weight, but its pronunciation is distinct.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/8/2025
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