There are two kinds of letters: vowels and consonants. Therefore, if a letter is not a vowel, it is a consonant. A consonant is a sound where the breath is at least partially obstructed. Combined with a vowel, they together can form a syllable.
The German alphabet is considered to have twenty-six letters (the same as in English); the umlauted vowels are not considered separate letters but are considered diacritics. The special double-s character is not considered a separate letter but a diagraph of two s letters (ss), now used only after a long vowel.
The English alphabet is composed of the vowels (a e i o u) with the rest of the alphabet consisting of consonants.The letter Y is sometimes used as a vowel and sometimes as a consonant.
Eight is the only single digit number to be spelled with all of its letters in alphabetical order. Eighty is another such number, but it is two digits. I'm not sure if there are others.
sweat. When two words start with the same letters and one has a suffix, the word without the suffix comes first in alphabetical order.
The word "your" contains a vowel pair (ou) rather than a vowel digraph. Vowel pairs are two adjacent vowels that each make their own distinct sound, while digraphs are two letters that make a single sound.
There is no anagram. If this is from Scrabble, you'll need another vowel or two. The longest word you can spell with these letters is "bring."
A 2 vowels and 2 consonant number is a four-digit number that consists of two vowel letters (a, e, i, o, u) and two consonant letters. For example, the number 1876 could be considered a 2 vowels and 2 consonant number because it has two vowel letters (a and e) and two consonant letters (b and r).
The verb am has a short A vowel sound. (The long A is heard in the word aim.)*The initialism AM is pronounced like the two letters, A M.
No, "alligator" is not a short vowel word. It contains a long vowel sound, spelled with two vowel letters "a" and "i."
There are two kinds of letters: vowels and consonants. Therefore, if a letter is not a vowel, it is a consonant. A consonant is a sound where the breath is at least partially obstructed. Combined with a vowel, they together can form a syllable.
No, "OE" is not considered a double vowel. It is a digraph, which means two letters that represent one sound or phoneme. In this case, "OE" is typically pronounced as a diphthong.
"icicles" is: vowel, consonant, vowel, consonant, consonant, vowel, consonant. Or VCVCCVC. If that's even what you mean. There are words referred to as "consonant, vowel, consonant" words, but they are always three letters long. A "consonant vowel" word would only be two letter long, like : be. So I'm not sure what you're asking here.
Kentucky is the name of a state that has two different vowels and more than 5 letters.
Ohio is a word. Ohio is a proper noun. Ohio is a state. The two letters 'o' and the single 'i' are vowels.
A digraph is a combination of two letters that make a single sound, like "th" in "this." A vowel pair is two vowels that appear together in a word, where each vowel retains its individual sound, like "ea" in "eat."
Vowel teams are a word with two vowel's