carrilhonarmeíamos
Syllables
car-ri-lho-nar-me-í-a-mos
Pronunciation
/kɐ.ɾi.ʎo.ˈnaɾ.mɨ.ˈja.muʃ/
Stress
01000101
Morphemes
carri-lho + nar-me-íamos
The verb 'carrilhonar-me-íamos' is divided into eight syllables: car-ri-lho-nar-me-í-a-mos. The primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'ri'. The word is morphologically complex, consisting of a root derived from Medieval Latin, verbal suffixes, and an enclitic pronoun. Syllabification follows standard Portuguese rules, considering open and closed syllables, diphthongs, and pronoun cliticization.
Definitions
- 1
To ring the bells; to chime.
We would chime/ring the bells.
“Se tivéssemos um carrilhão, carrilhonar-me-íamos para celebrar.”
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable 'ri' (second syllable).
Syllables
car — Open syllable, initial syllable.. ri — Open syllable, stressed syllable.. lho — Syllable with a diphthong and palatal lateral approximant.. nar — Open syllable, nasal vowel.. me — Closed syllable, enclitic pronoun.. í — Open syllable, vowel.. a — Open syllable, reduced vowel.. mos — Closed syllable, nasal vowel, consonant cluster.
Word Parts
Similar Words
Open Syllable Rule
Syllables ending in vowels are open.
Closed Syllable Rule
Syllables ending in consonants are closed.
Diphthong Rule
Diphthongs form a single syllable.
Pronoun Cliticization Rule
Enclitic pronouns attach to the verb and form a syllable with the preceding vowel.
- Enclitic pronoun 'me' forms a syllable with the preceding vowel.
- Nasal vowels are influenced by following nasal consonants.
- Palatal lateral approximant /ʎ/ in 'lho' is a characteristic feature of Portuguese.
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