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Word Analysis

niesiedemnastogodzinnych

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

8 syllables
24 characters
Polish
Enriched
8syllables

niesiedemnastogodzinnych

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

nie-sie-dem-na-sto-go-dzin-nych

Pronunciation

/ɲɛˈɕɛdɛmˈnastɔɡɔˈd͡ʑinːɨx/

Stress

01000101

Morphemes

nie- + siedemna- + -o-godzin-nych

The word 'niesiedemnastogodzinnych' is a complex Polish adjective syllabified according to the principles of maximizing onsets and avoiding stranded consonants. The stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('na'). The word is built from a negative prefix, a 'seventeen' root, and a compound stem relating to 'hours', with an inflectional suffix indicating grammatical function.

Definitions

adjective
  1. 1

    Relating to or lasting seventeen hours.

    Seventeen-hour

    Maraton biegowy trwał niesiedemnastogodzinnych.

    Niesiedemnastogodzinnych dyżur był wyczerpujący.

Stress pattern

Polish stress typically falls on the penultimate syllable. In this word, the primary stress is on the 'na' syllable (siedemna-).

Syllables

8
nie/ɲɛ/
sie/ɕɛ/
dem/dɛm/
na/na/
sto/stɔ/
go/ɡɔ/
dzin/d͡ʑin/
nych/ɨx/

nie Open syllable, containing the negative prefix. Relatively simple structure.. sie Open syllable, part of the root. Contains a palatalized consonant.. dem Closed syllable, part of the root. Contains a nasal vowel.. na Open syllable, part of the root. Stressed syllable.. sto Closed syllable, part of the root. Contains a consonant cluster.. go Open syllable, part of the compound stem. Connects the 'seventeen' part to 'hour'.. dzin Closed syllable, part of the compound stem. Contains a palatalized consonant.. nych Closed syllable, containing the inflectional suffix. Contains a vowel that is reduced.

Maximize Onsets

Polish syllabification prioritizes creating syllables with consonant onsets whenever possible. This is evident in syllables like 'dem' and 'sto'.

Avoid Stranded Consonants

Consonants are generally not left at the end of a syllable unless they are part of a consonant cluster that cannot be broken up. This is seen throughout the word.

Vowel-Based Division

Syllables are often divided around vowel sounds. Each vowel typically forms the nucleus of a syllable.

  • The presence of palatalized consonants (/ɲ/, /ɕ/) influences the phonetic realization of the syllables but does not alter the orthographic syllable division.
  • The long consonant /d͡ʑ/ in 'dzin' is a result of gemination and doesn't affect the syllable division.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/8/2025
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