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Word Analysis

organisasjonsspørsmål

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

8 syllables
21 characters
Norwegian Nynorsk
Enriched
8syllables

organisasjonsspørsmål

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

or-ga-ni-sa-sjons-spør-små-l

Pronunciation

/ɔrɡanisasjɔnsˈspœrsmɔːl/

Stress

00001100

Morphemes

organisasjons- / spørsmåls-

The word 'organisasjonsspørsmål' is a compound noun in Nynorsk, divided into eight syllables: or-ga-ni-sa-sjons-spør-små-l. Stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'spør'. Syllabification follows the principles of onset maximization and vowel sequencing, typical for Nynorsk. The word is morphologically complex, consisting of two roots derived from Latin and Old Norse.

Definitions

noun
  1. 1

    A question relating to the organization or structure of something.

    Organizational question

    Eit viktig organisasjonsspørsmål vart teke opp møtet.

    Ho stilte eit vanskeleg organisasjonsspørsmål.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'spør'. This is typical for Nynorsk nouns. The stress is marked with '1', while '0' indicates unstressed syllables.

Syllables

8
or/ɔr/
ga/ɡa/
ni/ni/
sa/sa/
sjons/sjɔns/
spør/spœr/
små/smɔː/
l/l/

or Open syllable, initial syllable, vowel nucleus.. ga Open syllable, vowel nucleus.. ni Open syllable, vowel nucleus.. sa Open syllable, vowel nucleus.. sjons Closed syllable, 'sj' is a single phoneme, consonant cluster at the end.. spør Open syllable, stressed syllable, vowel nucleus.. små Open syllable, vowel nucleus.. l Closed syllable, final syllable, consonant nucleus.

Onset Maximization

Consonant clusters are generally kept together at the beginning of a syllable (e.g., 'spørsmåls').

Vowel Sequencing

Each vowel sound generally forms the nucleus of a separate syllable (e.g., 'o-ga-ni-sa-sjons').

Sonority Sequencing Principle

Syllables are structured to follow the sonority sequencing principle, with sounds becoming more sonorous towards the nucleus.

  • The 'sj' sound is treated as a single phoneme.
  • The consonant cluster 'sm' does not pose a significant syllabification challenge.
  • Regional variations in vowel pronunciation may exist, but do not affect the core syllable division.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/6/2025
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