castanholarnosemos
Syllables
cas-tan-ho-lar-nos-e-mos
Pronunciation
/kɐʃtɐ̃.ɲɔˈlaɾ.nɔʃ.ˈe.muʃ/
Stress
0001011
Morphemes
castanhol + ar-nos-emos
The word 'castanholar-nos-emos' is a conjugated verb form. Syllabification follows the standard Portuguese rules of forming syllables around vowels, maintaining consonant clusters, and applying stress to the penultimate closed syllable. The morphemic structure reveals a verb root with infinitive, pronoun, and future/conditional endings.
Definitions
- 1
To click castanets
To click castanets
“Nós castanholar-nos-emos durante a festa.”
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable ('lar'), as it is a closed syllable. The final syllable 'mos' also receives secondary stress due to its position and the verb ending.
Syllables
cas — Open syllable, initial syllable.. tan — Open syllable, nasal vowel.. ho — Open syllable.. lar — Closed syllable, final consonant.. nos — Closed syllable, pronoun clitic.. e — Open syllable, vowel.. mos — Closed syllable, final consonant.
Word Parts
Vowel Rule
Syllables are formed around a vowel sound. Each vowel typically forms the nucleus of a syllable.
Consonant Cluster Rule
Consonant clusters are maintained within a syllable unless they violate Portuguese phonotactic constraints.
Stress Rule
Stress typically falls on the penultimate syllable if it is closed (ends in a consonant).
- The pronoun clitic '-nos' is a common feature and doesn't alter the syllabification rules. Nasal vowels are common in Portuguese and are treated as syllable nuclei.
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