Strengthlessnesses
The longest word in English language is pneumonoultramicroscopic silicovolcanoconiosis.(I split the word because it won't show up properly when I write it without breaking it up) It is the name of a lung disease. It is known as pneumonia in short.
In the English language the only letter that can be considered a consonant or a vowel is the letter Y. The letter W is a consonant.
You cannot produce a non-utterance in spoken language with vowels. Since written language is a representation of the spoken language, you cannot have words without vowels.Technically, no. "y" in the examples like shy is a vowel (as it makes a vowel sound); just like in loan words such as Gwn (whereby Welsh uses "w" as a vowel). A vowel is not defined by the letter that represents it but rather by the sound that is produced
There is no word in the English language with 19 syllables. The longest word is "antidisestablishmentarianism," and even that word only has 12.
The longest word in the English language with only one vowel is "strengths," containing nine letters and only one vowel, which is the letter "e."
Strengths. The longest word with one vowel repeated is strengthlessnesses.It Is The Word: Strengths :)
Strengthlessnesses
The longest word in English language is pneumonoultramicroscopic silicovolcanoconiosis.(I split the word because it won't show up properly when I write it without breaking it up) It is the name of a lung disease. It is known as pneumonia in short.
There are thousands of English words with only one vowel.The words I and a consist of only a single vowel.
Strengths.
Y is never a vowel. A, E, I, O and U are the only vowels in English language.
I can think of only one; STRENGTH
In the English language the only letter that can be considered a consonant or a vowel is the letter Y. The letter W is a consonant.
O is not an article, but it is a vowel (a, e, i, o, u). A, an, and the are the only articles in the English language.
Supercalifragalisticexpialadocous and hippomonstosousquipiddeliaphobia
You cannot produce a non-utterance in spoken language with vowels. Since written language is a representation of the spoken language, you cannot have words without vowels.Technically, no. "y" in the examples like shy is a vowel (as it makes a vowel sound); just like in loan words such as Gwn (whereby Welsh uses "w" as a vowel). A vowel is not defined by the letter that represents it but rather by the sound that is produced