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Word Analysis

vekselstrømsdynamo

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

6 syllables
18 characters
Norwegian
Enriched
6syllables

vekselstrømsdynamo

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

vek-sel-strøm-sdy-na-mo

Pronunciation

/ˈvɛksəlˌstrøːmsdʏnaˌmoː/

Stress

001001

Morphemes

veksel- + strøm- + -s-

The word 'vekselstrømsdynamo' is a Norwegian compound noun meaning 'alternating current dynamo'. It is syllabified as vek-sel-strøm-sdy-na-mo, with primary stress on the final syllable 'mo'. The word is composed of the prefix 'veksel-', the root 'strøm-', a connecting 's', and the root 'dynamo'. Syllable division follows Norwegian rules of dividing before vowels and after consonants, with stress falling on the last element of the compound.

Definitions

noun
  1. 1

    An alternating current dynamo; a machine that converts mechanical energy into electrical energy in the form of alternating current.

    Alternating current dynamo

    Fabrikken produserer vekselstrømsdynamoer.

    Vekselstrømsdynamoen er viktig for kraftproduksjon.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the 'mo' syllable of 'dynamo', which is the last element of the compound noun. Stress is indicated by '1', unstressed by '0'.

Syllables

6
vek/vɛk/
sel/sɛl/
strøm/strøːm/
sdy/sdʏ/
na/naː/
mo/moː/

vek Open syllable, initial syllable.. sel Open syllable, contains a short vowel.. strøm Open syllable, contains a long vowel.. sdy Closed syllable, short vowel.. na Open syllable, long vowel.. mo Open syllable, long vowel, stressed syllable.

Vowel Division

Syllables are generally divided before vowels.

Consonant Division

Syllables are generally divided after consonants.

Compound Word Syllabification

Compound words are syllabified by treating each component as a separate unit.

Stress on Last Element

In compound nouns, stress typically falls on the last element.

  • The 's' connecting 'strøm' and 'dynamo' is a common feature in Norwegian compound nouns and doesn't create a separate syllable.
  • Long vowels /øː/ and /aː/ influence syllable weight and pronunciation.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/8/2025
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