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Word Analysis

nykleblomsterfamilie

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

8 syllables
20 characters
Norwegian Nynorsk
Enriched
8syllables

nykleblomsterfamilie

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

nyk-le-blom-ster-fa-mi-li-e

Pronunciation

/ˈnʏkləˌblɔmstərfaˈmilɪə/

Stress

00100010

Morphemes

nykleblomsterfamilie

The word 'nykleblomsterfamilie' is a compound noun in Nynorsk, divided into eight syllables based on maximizing onsets and respecting vowel sequences. Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable of 'blomster'. The word consists of three roots: 'nykle', 'blomster', and 'familie'.

Definitions

noun
  1. 1

    The plant family Primulaceae, commonly known as the primrose family.

    Primrose family

    Nykleblomsterfamilien inkluderer mange vakre arter.

    Denne planten tilhører nykleblomsterfamilien.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable of 'blomster' ('-ster-'). The final syllable ('-e') receives secondary stress, though it is often reduced to a schwa.

Syllables

8
nyk/nʏk/
le/lə/
blom/blɔm/
ster/stɛr/
fa/fa/
mi/mi/
li/li/
e/ə/

nyk Open syllable, onset 'n', nucleus 'ʏ', coda 'k'. Initial syllable of the root 'nykle'.. le Open syllable, onset 'l', nucleus 'ə'. Final syllable of the root 'nykle'.. blom Closed syllable, onset 'bl', nucleus 'ɔ', coda 'm'. Initial syllable of the root 'blomster'.. ster Closed syllable, onset 'st', nucleus 'ɛ', coda 'r'. Final syllable of the root 'blomster', receives primary stress.. fa Open syllable, onset 'f', nucleus 'a'. Initial syllable of the root 'familie'.. mi Open syllable, onset 'm', nucleus 'i'. Middle syllable of the root 'familie'.. li Open syllable, onset 'l', nucleus 'i'. Final syllable of the root 'familie'.. e Open syllable, nucleus 'ə'. Schwa sound, often found in unstressed syllables.

Maximize Onsets

Consonant clusters are maintained at the beginning of syllables whenever possible (e.g., 'bl' in 'blom').

Vowel Sequences

Each vowel generally forms the nucleus of a separate syllable (e.g., 'fa-mi-li-e').

Penultimate Stress (Compound Nouns)

In compound nouns, the penultimate syllable of the second element often receives primary stress.

  • The compound nature of the word requires careful consideration of morpheme boundaries.
  • Regional variations in vowel pronunciation might slightly affect the phonetic transcription, but not the syllable division.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/6/2025
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