middelalderlitteratur
Syllables
mid-del-al-der-lit-te-ra-tur
Pronunciation
/mɪdːəlˈɑldərˌlɪtːərɑˈtuːr/
Stress
00100011
Morphemes
middelalderlitteratur
The Norwegian word 'middelalderlitteratur' (medieval literature) is divided into eight syllables with primary stress on 'al'. It's a compound noun formed from Old Norse and Latin roots, following Norwegian syllabification rules of onset maximization and vowel-centric division.
Definitions
- 1
Medieval literature
Medieval literature
“Hun studerer middelalderlitteratur.”
“Middelalderlitteratur gir et innblikk i datidens samfunn.”
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the second syllable ('al'), and a secondary stress on the last syllable ('tur').
Syllables
mid — Open syllable, onset 'm', nucleus 'i', coda 'd'. del — Open syllable, onset 'd', nucleus 'e', coda 'l'. al — Open syllable, onset 'al', nucleus 'a', primary stress. der — Open syllable, onset 'd', nucleus 'e', coda 'r'. lit — Open syllable, onset 'l', nucleus 'i', coda 't'. te — Open syllable, onset 't', nucleus 'e'. ra — Open syllable, onset 'r', nucleus 'a'. tur — Open syllable, onset 't', nucleus 'u', coda 'r', secondary stress
Similar Words
Onset Maximization
Norwegian prefers to include as many consonants as possible in the onset of a syllable.
Vowel-Centric Division
Syllables are generally built around vowel nuclei.
Sonority Sequencing Principle
Consonants are ordered by sonority, with more sonorous sounds tending to be syllable nuclei.
- The compound nature of the word influences stress placement.
- Regional variations in 'r' pronunciation may affect perceived syllable boundaries.
Nearby Words
17 wordsTrending in Norwegian
Terms getting hyphenated by users right now.