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Word Analysis

nieelektronowooptycznych

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

8 syllables
24 characters
Polish
Enriched
8syllables

nieelektronooptycznych

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

nie-e-le-ktron-o-op-tycz-nych

Pronunciation

/ɲɛ.ɛ.lɛ.ktrɔ.nɔ.ɔp.ˈtɨt͡ʂ.nɨx/

Stress

00000010

Morphemes

nie- + elektron- + -owooptyczn-ych

The word 'nieelektronowooptycznych' is a complex Polish adjective with eight syllables, divided based on vowel-centeredness and consonant cluster tolerance. The primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('tycz'). It's formed through extensive prefixation, root usage, and suffixation, denoting a lack of both electronic and optical properties.

Definitions

adjective
  1. 1

    Not electronic or optical; lacking electronic or optical properties.

    Non-electronic-optical

    Materiały nieelektronowooptyczne trudne do analizy.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'tycz' (op-tycz-nych). Polish stress is generally fixed on the penultimate syllable.

Syllables

8
nie/ɲɛ/
e/ɛ/
le/lɛ/
ktron/ktrɔn/
o/ɔ/
op/ɔp/
tycz/tɨt͡ʂ/
nych/nɨx/

nie Open syllable, containing the prefix. Stressed level 0.. e Open syllable, vowel only. Stressed level 0.. le Open syllable, containing part of the root. Stressed level 0.. ktron Closed syllable, containing a complex consonant cluster. Stressed level 0.. o Open syllable, interfix. Stressed level 0.. op Open syllable, beginning of the optical component. Stressed level 0.. tycz Closed syllable, containing the core of the optical component. Stressed level 1.. nych Closed syllable, containing the adjectival inflection. Stressed level 0.

Vowel-Centered Syllables

Polish syllables generally center around vowels. Each vowel (or diphthong) forms the nucleus of a syllable.

Consonant Clusters

Polish allows for complex consonant clusters within syllables, as seen in 'ktron' and 'tycz'.

Prefix/Suffix Separation

Prefixes and suffixes are generally separated into distinct syllables.

  • The length and complexity of the word make it an exceptional case, but the rules still apply consistently.
  • The interfix '-o-' is a common feature in Polish derivational morphology and doesn't pose a syllabification challenge.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/8/2025
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