W is a vowel sometimes, as is Y. There are words in Welsh that use only a W. An example would be the word tow. Without the W the O would not be long. This illustrates that the W is forming a diphthong, which mirrors the use of the letter U from which it developed. After a vowel, W is considered as a vowel, with an "au, oo, or oh" sound. Before a vowel it is considered a consonant, with its "wh" sound.
A consonant is a letter in the alphabet other than a vowelA vowel is English is a, e, i, o, u (and sometimes w and y)
"There are 2 consonants in sew, as 's' and 'w' are consonants and 'e' is a vowel. 'A' 'E' 'I' 'O' and 'U' are vowels, and every other letter in the English language is a consonant." Actually, the word "sew" has only one consonant: s. When the letter "w" ends a word after following a vowel (or in other places where it forms a "diphthong"), the "w" is technically a vowel.
None. All of the letters in "Wyoming" are sounded: "W" consonant, "yo" diphthongal vowel, "m" consonant, "i" vowel, "ng" blended consonant. As noted above some the letters sound together as pairs of vowels or consonants ("yo" vowel and "ng" consonant).
All words have to have a vowel in them. The five orthodox ones are a,e,i,o,u. However in words such as 'why' and 'sky', the 'y' can be taken to be the vowel. Y is considered a semi-vowel.
In English, the letter "w" is considered a consonant because it is typically pronounced with a consonant sound, as in words like "water" and "swerve." It functions as a vowel in some cases, such as in the diphthongs "ow" and "aw."
The letter 'w' can represent both a vowel sound (as in "cow" or "now") and a consonant sound (as in "well" or "window").
In English, the letter "w" is typically considered a consonant. However, in certain cases, such as in some dialects or when acting as a vowel in words like "cwm" or "crwth," it can function as a vowel.
W is a vowel sometimes, as is Y. There are words in Welsh that use only a W. An example would be the word tow. Without the W the O would not be long. This illustrates that the W is forming a diphthong, which mirrors the use of the letter U from which it developed. After a vowel, W is considered as a vowel, with an "au, oo, or oh" sound. Before a vowel it is considered a consonant, with its "wh" sound.
'W' cannot be a vowel, the only interchangeable letter is 'y'. Here in the word 'two' 'w' is a silent consonant.
W is a consonant because it is not a vowel.
In English, the letter "w" is considered a vowel when it is part of a diphthong, which is a combination of two vowel sounds pronounced in one syllable (e.g. in words like "cow" or "how"). In these cases, the "w" does not function as a consonant and instead helps create the diphthong sound.
A consonant is a letter in the alphabet other than a vowelA vowel is English is a, e, i, o, u (and sometimes w and y)
"There are 2 consonants in sew, as 's' and 'w' are consonants and 'e' is a vowel. 'A' 'E' 'I' 'O' and 'U' are vowels, and every other letter in the English language is a consonant." Actually, the word "sew" has only one consonant: s. When the letter "w" ends a word after following a vowel (or in other places where it forms a "diphthong"), the "w" is technically a vowel.
βGrewβ is a verb, not a vowel or consonant. It consists of the consonants βgβ, βrβ, and βwβ, with the vowel βeβ in the middle.
None. All of the letters in "Wyoming" are sounded: "W" consonant, "yo" diphthongal vowel, "m" consonant, "i" vowel, "ng" blended consonant. As noted above some the letters sound together as pairs of vowels or consonants ("yo" vowel and "ng" consonant).
No a W is never a vowel. The only vowels are A,E,I,O,U and sometimes Y no, there are only five vowels in the English alphabet: A, E, I, O, U; once in a while though we use Y as a vowel as in the word FLY