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Word Analysis

radiostörningsutrustningarnas

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

11 syllables
29 characters
Swedish
Enriched
11syllables

radiostörningsutrustningarnas

Linguistic Analysis

Syllables

ra-di-o-stör-nings-u-trust-ning-a-rna-s

Pronunciation

/ˈraːdɪɔstœːrniŋsʊtrʊstˈniŋaːɳas/

Stress

00010001001

Morphemes

radio- + störning- + -arnas

The word 'radiostörningsutrustningarnas' is a complex Swedish noun meaning 'the radio interference equipment's'. It is divided into 11 syllables based on vowel nuclei, with primary stress on '-nings'. The syllabification follows standard Swedish rules, allowing for consonant clusters and accommodating the genitive plural suffix.

Definitions

noun
  1. 1

    the radio interference equipment's

    the radio interference equipment's

    Man undersökte radiostörningsutrustningarnas funktion.

Stress pattern

Primary stress falls on the syllable '-nings' (stör-nings). Swedish generally stresses the first syllable, but compound words and suffixes can shift the stress.

Syllables

11
ra/raː/
di/di/
o/ɔ/
stör/stœːr/
nings/niŋs/
u/ʊ/
trust/trʊst/
ning/niŋ/
a/aː/
rna/rna/
s/s/

ra Open syllable, vowel nucleus 'a'. di Open syllable, vowel nucleus 'i'. o Open syllable, vowel nucleus 'o'. stör Closed syllable, consonant cluster 'st', vowel nucleus 'ö'. nings Closed syllable, consonant cluster 'ng'. u Open syllable, vowel nucleus 'u'. trust Closed syllable, consonant cluster 'tr'. ning Closed syllable, consonant cluster 'ng'. a Open syllable, vowel nucleus 'a'. rna Closed syllable, consonant cluster 'rn'. s Closed syllable, final consonant

Vowel Nucleus Rule

Syllables are formed around a vowel nucleus. Each syllable must contain at least one vowel.

Consonant Cluster Rule

Permissible consonant clusters (e.g., 'st', 'tr', 'ng', 'rn') can occur at the beginning or end of a syllable without necessarily causing syllable division.

  • The genitive plural suffix '-arnas' is a relatively long suffix, but it's divided according to standard vowel-based syllabification.
  • Consonant clusters 'st', 'tr', and 'ng' are common in Swedish and do not pose exceptional syllabification challenges.
Analysis by gemma3:27b · 6/5/2025
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