varisyllabicity

English

Etymology

From varisyllabic +‎ -ity.

Noun

varisyllabicity (uncountable)

  1. (linguistics) The state of being varisyllabic, i.e. having a variable number of syllables depending on pronunciation or analysis.
    • 2012 October 15, John C. Wells, “derived semivowels”, in John Wells’s phonetic blog[1]:
      Is dahlia ˈdeɪljə an exact rhyme with failure ˈfeɪljə? Well, yes and no. The possible difference between them is not a matter of as against j, but rather of our awareness of the varisyllabicity in dahlia as against its absence in failure. We know that dahlia can optionally be said with three syllables (by some of us, at least), while failure can only have two.