HyphenateIt

Hyphenation offlorescer-lhes-íamos

Syllable Division & Pronunciation

Syllable Division:

flo-res-cer-lhes-i-á-mos

Phonetic Transcription:(how the word sounds using IPA symbols)

/fluɾɛˈsɛɾ ʎɛʃ iˈa.muʃ/

Stress Pattern:(which syllables are emphasized when speaking)

0010010

Primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable of the root verb 'cer' due to it being a closed syllable.

Detailed Syllable Breakdown

Syllables are the building blocks of words - each one typically contains a vowel sound

flo/flu/

Open syllable, vowel followed by liquid consonant.

res/ɾɛʃ/

Closed syllable, vowel followed by consonant cluster.

cer/sɛɾ/

Closed syllable, vowel followed by consonant.

lhes/ʎɛʃ/

Closed syllable, vowel followed by consonant cluster (palatal lateral).

i/i/

Open syllable, single vowel.

á/a/

Open syllable, single vowel, stressed.

mos/muʃ/

Closed syllable, vowel followed by consonant cluster.

Morphemic Breakdown

Morphemes are the smallest meaningful parts of words: prefixes (beginning), roots (core meaning), and suffixes (ending)

(prefix)
+
florescer(root)
+
lhes-íamos(suffix)

Prefix:

None

Root: florescer

Latin *florēscere* - to flourish, to bloom

Suffix: lhes-íamos

Pronoun clitic *lhes* (to them) + verb inflectional ending *-íamos* (1st person plural conditional)

Meanings & Definitions
verb(grammatical role in sentences)

We would flourish/bloom.

Translation: We would flourish/bloom.

Examples:

"Se tivéssemos mais recursos, florescer-lhes-íamos os jardins."

Similar Words Comparison

Words with similar syllable patterns or pronunciation features

florescerflo-res-cer

Shares the same root and initial syllable structure.

floresciamflo-res-ci-am

Shares the same root and initial syllable structure, differing in the verb ending.

florescênciaflo-res-cên-cia

Shares the same root and initial syllable structure, differing in the suffix.

Syllable Division Rules

The linguistic principles used to determine where syllables begin and end

Open Syllable Rule

A syllable ending in a vowel is considered open.

Closed Syllable Rule

A syllable ending in a consonant is considered closed.

Consonant Cluster Rule

Consonant clusters are treated as part of the following syllable if they cannot form a syllable on their own.

Special Considerations

Important exceptions or unusual features in this word's pronunciation or structure

The clitic pronoun 'lhes' is treated as a separate syllable despite being attached to the verb stem.

Regional variations in vowel pronunciation (BP vs. EP) may occur but do not affect syllabification.

Analysis Summary

Summary:

The word 'florescer-lhes-íamos' is a conjugated verb form divided into seven syllables: flo-res-cer-lhes-i-á-mos. Stress falls on the 'cer' syllable. It's composed of the root 'florescer' and the clitic pronoun/inflectional ending 'lhes-íamos'. Syllabification follows standard Portuguese rules prioritizing vowel sounds and consonant clusters.

Detailed Analysis:

Linguistic Analysis of "florescer-lhes-íamos" (Portuguese)

1. Pronunciation Considerations:

The word "florescer-lhes-íamos" is a conjugated verb form in Portuguese. It's a complex word formed by combining a verb stem, pronouns, and inflectional endings. Pronunciation will follow standard European Portuguese (EP) or Brazilian Portuguese (BP) rules, with slight variations in vowel quality and nasalization. This analysis will primarily focus on EP pronunciation, noting BP differences where relevant.

2. Syllable Division:

Following Portuguese syllabification rules, which prioritize vowel sounds and consonant clusters, the word is divided as follows (using only original letters):

flo-res-cer-lhes-i-á-mos

3. Morphemic Analysis:

  • Prefix: None
  • Root: florescer (to flourish, to bloom) - Latin florēscere (from flos 'flower' + cēre 'to grow'). This is the verb stem.
  • Suffixes:
    • -lhes - Pronoun clitic (indirect object pronoun: to them). Origin: Latin illis.
    • -íamos - Verb inflectional ending indicating the 1st person plural conditional tense. Origin: Latin -ēbamus.

4. Stress Identification:

The primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable of the root verb: flo-res-cer-lhes-i-á-mos. This is due to the penultimate syllable being closed (ending in a consonant).

5. Phonetic Transcription (IPA):

/fluɾɛˈsɛɾ ʎɛʃ iˈa.muʃ/ (European Portuguese)
/floɾeˈseɾ ʎeʃ iˈa.muʃ/ (Brazilian Portuguese - slight vowel differences)

6. Syllable Breakdown & Rule Application:

Syllable IPA Transcription Rule(s) Applied Exceptions/Special Cases
flo /flu/ Open syllable rule: Vowel followed by a liquid consonant (l). None
res /ɾɛʃ/ Closed syllable rule: Vowel followed by a consonant cluster (r + s). None
cer /sɛɾ/ Closed syllable rule: Vowel followed by a consonant cluster (r). None
lhes /ʎɛʃ/ Closed syllable rule: Vowel followed by a consonant cluster (lh + s). 'lh' is a palatal lateral approximant. 'lh' is a digraph, treated as a single phoneme for syllabification.
i /i/ Open syllable rule: Single vowel. None
á /a/ Open syllable rule: Single vowel. Stress falls on this syllable.
mos /muʃ/ Closed syllable rule: Vowel followed by a consonant cluster (m + s). None

7. Edge Case Review:

The clitic pronoun lhes attached to the verb stem can sometimes cause syllabification ambiguity. However, in this case, it's treated as a separate syllable due to the clear vowel-consonant boundary.

8. Grammatical Role:

"Florescer-lhes-íamos" is exclusively a verb form (1st person plural conditional of florescer). Syllabification remains consistent regardless of the verb's function within a sentence.

9. Definition & Semantics:

  • Part of Speech: Verb
  • Definitions:
    • "We would flourish/bloom."
    • "We would make flourish/bloom."
  • Translation: "We would flourish/bloom."
  • Synonyms: prosperar-lhes-íamos, desabrochar-lhes-íamos
  • Antonyms: murchar-lhes-íamos (we would wither them)
  • Examples:
    • "Se tivéssemos mais recursos, florescer-lhes-íamos os jardins." (If we had more resources, we would make their gardens flourish.)

10. Regional Variations:

Brazilian Portuguese tends to reduce unstressed vowels more than European Portuguese. This might lead to a slightly different phonetic realization of the vowels in "florescer-lhes-íamos," but the syllabification remains the same.

11. Phonological Comparison:

Word Syllables Syllable Structure
florescer flo-res-cer Open-Closed-Closed
floresciam flo-res-ci-am Open-Closed-Open-Open
florescência flo-res-cên-cia Open-Closed-Open-Open

All three words share the "flo-res-" syllable structure. The differences arise from the suffixes and endings, which determine the final syllable structures. The rule of closed syllables determining stress is consistent across all three words.

Analysis generated by gemma3:27b on 6/10/2025

The hottest word splits in Portuguese

See what terms are trending and getting hyphenated by users right now.

  • abalará
  • abalais
  • abalara
  • abalado
  • abalada
  • abajour
  • abajara
  • abaixou
  • abaixoe
  • abaixos
  • abaixes
  • abaixem
  • abaixas
  • abaixar
  • abaixei
  • abaixam
  • abaglia
  • abaixai
  • abafeis
  • abafará

What is hyphenation

Hyphenation is the process of dividing words across lines in print or on websites. It involves inserting hyphens (-) where a word breaks to continue on the next line.

Proper hyphenation improves readability by reducing the unevenness of word spacing and unnecessary large gaps. It also helps avoid confusion that may occur when part of a word carries over. Ideal hyphenation should break words according to pronunciation and syllables. Most word processors and publishing apps have automated tools to handle hyphenation effectively based on language rules and dictionaries. Though subtle, proper hyphenation improves overall typography and reading comfort.