There are many such words. One pattern involves two syllables, each of which is consonant-vowel-consonant. Examples of words in this pattern are patter, mother, father, morbid, torpor, putrid, rotten, and turgid. Variants involving a syllable that is consonant-consonant-vowel include nettle, cattle, gravid, and placid.
Strengths
Strength.
The ratio of vowels to consonants in "San Francisco" is 4:7.
five to twenty one
there are 4 consonants in the name Parker, P, R, K, and another R. A, AND E are vowels
In the word "Minnesota," there are four vowels (i, e, o, a) and six consonants (M, n, n, s, t). This gives a ratio of 4 vowels to 6 consonants, which simplifies to 2:3.
There are more consonants.
There are 4 vowels and 7 consonants in this word. So, 4/11 of the letters are vowels.
independent = ieee, 4 vowels, and ndpndnt, 7 consonants, therefore there are three fewer vowels than consonants.
The word "distance" has 4 consonants (d, s, t, n, c) and 4 vowels (i, a, e).
Strengths
Strength.
4
A word with 4 vowels and 6 consonants would have a total of 10 letters. One example of such a word could be "education." This word has the vowels e, u, a, and i, and the consonants d, c, t, n, and, and has a total of 10 letters.
Pearls. E + A = 2 vowels P,R, L + S = 4 consonants
There are 6 vowels and 7 consonants so there is 1 more consonant
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