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Word Analysis

niehydrometeorologicznego

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

11 syllables
25 characters
Polish
Enriched
11syllables

niehydrometeorologitcznego

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

nie-hy-dro-me-teo-ro-lo-gi-tcz-ne-go

Pronunciation

/ɲɛ.xɨ.drɔ.mɛ.tɛ.ɔ.rɔ.lɔˈɡit͡ʂ.nɛ.ɡɔ/

Stress

00000010000

Morphemes

nie- + hydro-meteor-log- + -icznego

The word 'niehydrometeorologicznego' is a complex Polish adjective syllabified according to rules maximizing onsets, avoiding stranded consonants, and adhering to the penultimate stress pattern. It's formed from Greek and Slavic morphemes, and its syllable division reflects the language's tolerance for consonant clusters.

Definitions

adjective
  1. 1

    Not relating to the study of the physical and chemical properties of atmospheric water in its various forms (rain, snow, hail, etc.).

    Not hydrometeorological

    Badania niehydrometeorologicznego zjawiska.

Stress pattern

Stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('gi' in 'lo-gi-'), following the standard Polish stress pattern.

Syllables

11
nie/ɲɛ/
hy/xɨ/
dro/drɔ/
me/mɛ/
teo/tɛ.ɔ/
ro/rɔ/
lo/lɔ/
gi/ɡi/
tcz/t͡ʂ/
ne/nɛ/
go/ɡɔ/

nie Open syllable, unstressed.. hy Closed syllable, unstressed.. dro Closed syllable, unstressed.. me Open syllable, unstressed.. teo Open syllable, unstressed.. ro Open syllable, unstressed.. lo Open syllable, unstressed.. gi Open syllable, stressed.. tcz Closed syllable, unstressed.. ne Open syllable, unstressed.. go Open syllable, unstressed.

Maximize Onsets

Polish prefers syllables with consonant onsets whenever possible, as seen in 'tcz'.

Avoid Stranded Consonants

Consonants are generally not left as the sole element of a syllable, ensuring each syllable has a vowel.

Penultimate Stress

Stress typically falls on the penultimate syllable, dictating the prominence of 'gi'.

Consonant Clusters

Permissible consonant clusters, like 'dr' and 'tcz', are kept intact within a syllable.

  • The 'rz' cluster is treated as a single phoneme /ʐ/ in this case.
  • The word's length and complexity require careful application of syllable division rules to avoid misinterpretations.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/7/2025
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