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Word Analysis

nieogólnoamerykańskiego

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

11 syllables
23 characters
Polish
Enriched
11syllables

nieogólnoamerykańskiego

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

nie-o-gól-no-a-me-ry-ka-ń-skie-go

Pronunciation

/ɲɛ.ɔˈɡɔl.nɔ.a.mɛ.ˈrɨ.kaɲ.skʲɛ̃.ɡɔ/

Stress

00100010000

Morphemes

nie- + ogólno- + -go

The word 'nieogólnoamerykańskiego' is a complex Polish adjective syllabified based on maximizing onsets and avoiding stranded consonants. Stress falls on the penultimate syllable. It's formed from the prefix 'nie-', the roots 'ogólno-' and 'amerykański', and the genitive masculine singular suffix '-go'.

Definitions

adjective
  1. 1

    Not generally American; not of a generally American character.

    Non-general American

    To nie jest styl ogólnoamerykański.

    Jego podejście jest nieogólnoamerykańskiego typu.

Stress pattern

Polish stress is generally on the penultimate syllable. In this word, the primary stress falls on the 'gól' syllable (3rd syllable) and 'ry' syllable (7th syllable).

Syllables

11
nie/ɲɛ/
o/ɔ/
gól/ˈɡɔl/
no/nɔ/
a/a/
me/mɛ/
ry/ˈrɨ/
ka/ka/
ń/ɲ/
skie/skʲɛ̃/
go/ɡɔ/

nie Open syllable, containing the prefix. Unstressed.. o Open syllable, part of the root 'ogólno-'. Unstressed.. gól Closed syllable, part of the root 'ogólno-'. Primary stressed syllable.. no Open syllable, part of the root 'ogólno-'. Unstressed.. a Open syllable, transition to the next root. Unstressed.. me Open syllable, part of the root 'amerykański'. Unstressed.. ry Closed syllable, part of the root 'amerykański'. Primary stressed syllable.. ka Open syllable, part of the root 'amerykański'. Unstressed.. ń Closed syllable, part of the root 'amerykański'. Unstressed.. skie Closed syllable, part of the root 'amerykański' and the suffix. Unstressed.. go Closed syllable, containing the inflectional suffix. Unstressed.

Maximize Onsets

Polish syllabification prioritizes creating syllables with consonant onsets whenever possible. This is evident in the 'ry' syllable.

Avoid Stranded Consonants

Consonants are generally not left at the end of a syllable unless they are part of a consonant cluster that can form an onset.

Vowel as Syllable Nucleus

Each syllable must have a vowel as its nucleus.

  • The 'rz' cluster is treated as a single onset.
  • Nasal vowels like 'ę' require specific phonetic transcription.
  • The word's length and complex morphology make syllabification challenging, requiring careful application of the rules.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/10/2025
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