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Word Analysis

psychoanalizowalibyście

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

10 syllables
23 characters
Polish
Enriched
10syllables

psychoanalizowalibyście

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

psy-cho-a-na-li-zo-wa-li-by-ście

Pronunciation

/psɨ.xɔ.a.na.lʲi.zɔ.va.lʲi.bɨ.ɕt͡ɕe/

Stress

0000100100

Morphemes

psycho- + analiz- + -owa-li-by-ście

The word 'psychoanalizowalibyście' is a complex Polish verb form. Syllabification follows the sonority sequencing principle and open syllable preference, resulting in ten syllables with stress on the penultimate syllable 'li'. The word is morphologically complex, containing a Greek-derived prefix, root, and several suffixes indicating conditional mood, plurality, and person.

Definitions

verb
  1. 1

    To be psychoanalyzing (someone) - conditional mood, plural, 3rd person.

    To be psychoanalyzing (someone)

    Gdybym miał czas, psychoanalizowałbym cię. (If I had time, I would psychoanalyze you.)

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'li' (5th syllable from the beginning).

Syllables

10
psy/psɨ/
cho/xɔ/
a/a/
na/na/
li/lʲi/
zo/zɔ/
wa/va/
li/lʲi/
by/bɨ/
ście/ɕt͡ɕe/

psy Open syllable, initial syllable.. cho Open syllable.. a Open syllable, single vowel.. na Open syllable.. li Open syllable, stressed syllable, palatalization of 'l'. zo Open syllable.. wa Open syllable.. li Open syllable, palatalization of 'l'. by Open syllable.. ście Closed syllable, final syllable.

Sonority Sequencing Principle

Syllables are formed around a vowel nucleus, with consonants arranged according to their sonority.

Open Syllable Preference

Polish tends to favor open syllables (ending in a vowel).

Consonant Cluster Resolution

Consonant clusters are broken up to maximize syllable onsets and codas.

Palatalization

The 'l' sound becomes palatalized before 'i', influencing the syllable structure.

  • The word's length and consonant clusters can pose challenges for non-native speakers, but the rules consistently apply.
  • Vowel reduction in unstressed syllables is a common phonetic phenomenon but doesn't alter the syllable division.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/9/2025
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