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Word Analysis

socjalnoubezpieczeniowa

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

9 syllables
23 characters
Polish
Enriched
9syllables

socjalnoubezpieczeniowa

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

so-cjal-no-u-bez-pie-cze-nio-wa

Pronunciation

/sɔˈt͡ɕal.nɔ.ubɛz.pʲɛ.t͡ʂɛ.ɲɔ.va/

Stress

010001000

Morphemes

socjal- + ubezpiecze- + -noubezpieczeniowa

The word 'socjalnoubezpieczeniowa' is syllabified based on maximizing onsets and avoiding stranded consonants, resulting in nine syllables. Stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('pie'). The word is morphologically complex, combining a French-derived prefix, a Polish root, and several suffixes. It functions as an adjective meaning 'social security-related'.

Definitions

adjective
  1. 1

    Relating to social security; pertaining to the system of social insurance.

    Social security-related

    polityka socjalnoubezpieczeniowa

    świadczenia socjalnoubezpieczeniowe

Stress pattern

Stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('pie'), indicated by '1'. All other syllables are unstressed ('0').

Syllables

9
so/sɔ/
cjal/t͡ɕal/
no/nɔ/
u/u/
bez/bɛz/
pie/pʲɛ/
cze/t͡ʂɛ/
nio/ɲɔ/
wa/va/

so Open syllable, containing the initial consonant and vowel.. cjal Closed syllable, containing a palatalized consonant cluster and a vowel.. no Open syllable, serving as a linking element.. u Open syllable, a short vowel.. bez Closed syllable, containing a consonant cluster and a vowel.. pie Closed syllable, containing a palatalized consonant and a vowel. Stressed syllable.. cze Closed syllable, containing a consonant cluster and a vowel.. nio Open syllable, containing a palatalized consonant and a vowel.. wa Open syllable, containing a vowel and a consonant.

Maximize Onsets

Polish favors maximizing consonant clusters within syllables as onsets rather than codas.

Avoid Stranded Consonants

Consonants are generally not left at the end of a syllable unless necessary due to word structure.

Palatalization

Palatalized consonants (like /pʲ/) are treated as single units within a syllable.

  • Consonant clusters like 'sz', 'cz', 'rz', 'dż' are treated as single phonemes, influencing syllabification.
  • The linking element '-no-' is treated as a separate syllable despite its brevity.
  • Regional variations in pronunciation might slightly affect syllable boundaries, but the core division remains consistent.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/9/2025
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