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Word Analysis

niejedenastokondygnacyjny

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

12 syllables
25 characters
Polish
Enriched
12syllables

niejedenastokondygnacyjnynatczy

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

niej-e-den-a-sto-kon-dy-gnac-yj-ny-na-tczy

Pronunciation

/ɲɛˈd͡ʑɛ.dɛ.na.stɔ.kɔ̃.dɨɡ.ɲaˈt͡sɨj.na.t͡ʂɨ/

Stress

00000010001

Morphemes

niej- + jedenast- + -okondygnacyjny

The word 'niejedenastokondygnacyjny' is a complex Polish adjective syllabified based on maximizing onsets and avoiding stranded consonants. Stress falls on the penultimate syllable. It's morphologically composed of a negative prefix, a numerical root, and a complex adjectival suffix. Syllable division follows standard Polish phonological rules, allowing for complex consonant clusters.

Definitions

adjective
  1. 1

    Having eleven floors or stories.

    Eleven-story

    Budynek jest niejedenastokondygnacyjny.

    Ten hotel ma niejedenastokondygnacyjny charakter.

Stress pattern

Stress falls on the penultimate syllable, specifically on the 'gnac' syllable within the suffix '-kondygnacyjny'.

Syllables

12
niej/ɲɛj/
e/ɛ/
den/dɛn/
a/a/
sto/stɔ/
kon/kɔn/
dy/dɨ/
gnac/ɡnat͡s/
yj/j/
ny/na/
na/na/
tczy/t͡ʂɨ/

niej Open syllable, initial nasal vowel. Contains the prefix.. e Open syllable, vowel only. Often occurs in Polish due to vowel reduction.. den Closed syllable, containing part of the root.. a Open syllable, vowel only. Part of the root.. sto Closed syllable, part of the root. Consonant cluster onset.. kon Closed syllable, beginning of the suffix.. dy Closed syllable, part of the suffix.. gnac Closed syllable, stressed syllable, part of the suffix.. yj Open syllable, semi-vowel and consonant. Part of the suffix.. ny Closed syllable, part of the suffix.. na Open syllable, part of the suffix.. tczy Closed syllable, final part of the suffix.

Maximize Onsets

Polish favors creating syllables with consonant onsets whenever possible, avoiding stranded consonants.

Avoid Stranded Consonants

Consonants are generally not left as the sole element of a syllable unless absolutely necessary.

Vowel-Based Division

Vowels typically form the nucleus of a syllable, and syllable boundaries often occur between vowels.

  • The long consonant clusters (e.g., -stokondygn-) are permissible in Polish and do not necessarily trigger additional syllable divisions.
  • The nasal vowel /ɔ̃/ does not affect the syllable division process.
  • The vowel 'e' can sometimes be reduced to a schwa-like sound, but this doesn't change the orthographic syllable division.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/7/2025
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