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Word Analysis

niehalogenowęglowodorowy

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

11 syllables
24 characters
Polish
Enriched
11syllables

niehalogenoglowodorowy

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

nie-ha-lo-ge-no-wę-glo-wo-do-ro-wy

Pronunciation

/ɲɛ.xa.lɔ.ˈɡɛ.nɔ.vɛ̃.ˈɡlɔ.vɔ.ˈdɔ.rɔ.vɨ/

Stress

00010011001

Morphemes

nie + halogeno + owy

The word 'niehalogenowęglowodorowy' is a complex Polish adjective syllabified based on vowel-centric rules and penultimate stress. It's formed from Greek and Polish roots with a negation prefix. The syllable division prioritizes maintaining consonant clusters where possible, resulting in a 11-syllable structure.

Definitions

adjective
  1. 1

    Relating to or denoting a hydrocarbon that does not contain halogen atoms.

    Non-halogenated hydrocarbon

    Badania dotyczyły niehalogenowęglowodorowych rozpuszczalników.

Stress pattern

Stress falls on the penultimate syllable (second to last), specifically on 'ge', 'glo', and 'wo'.

Syllables

11
nie/ɲɛ/
ha/xa/
lo/lɔ/
ge/ɡɛ/
no/nɔ/
/vɛ̃/
glo/ɡlɔ/
wo/vɔ/
do/dɔ/
ro/rɔ/
wy/vɨ/

nie Open syllable, containing a nasal vowel. Unstressed.. ha Open syllable, containing a fricative. Unstressed.. lo Open syllable, containing a back vowel. Unstressed.. ge Open syllable, containing a front vowel. Stressed.. no Open syllable, containing a back vowel. Unstressed.. Open syllable, containing a nasal vowel. Unstressed.. glo Open syllable, containing a back vowel. Stressed.. wo Open syllable, containing a back vowel. Stressed.. do Open syllable, containing a back vowel. Unstressed.. ro Open syllable, containing a back vowel. Unstressed.. wy Open syllable, containing a high vowel. Unstressed.

Vowel-centric Syllabification

Polish syllables are generally built around vowels, with consonants assigned to the nearest vowel.

Consonant Cluster Resolution

Consonant clusters are maintained within a syllable unless they are exceptionally difficult to pronounce.

Penultimate Stress

Stress typically falls on the second-to-last syllable of the word.

  • The word's length and complex consonant clusters present a challenge for syllabification, but the rules are consistently applied.
  • Nasal vowels require careful articulation and are treated as syllable nuclei.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/8/2025
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