No, the letter "y" is not a vowel in the word "crazy." In this word, "y" is serving as a consonant sound.
No, in the word "jaunty", the letter y is functioning as a consonant, not a vowel. It makes a consonant sound at the beginning of the word.
The word "rhythm" does not have a vowel, or end in the letter y.
Yes, "busy" is a VCCV word. It consists of a short vowel sound (u) followed by two consonants (s and y), another short vowel sound (i), and ends in a consonant (y).
In the word "crazy," the letter "y" is not considered a vowel. The vowels in this word are "a" and "y" is a consonant.
In the word "money," the letter "y" functions as a vowel because it creates a vowel sound in this particular word.
Yes, the letter y can sometimes act as a vowel in the word "yes".
In the word "anything," the letter Y is acting as a vowel because it is making the sound of a long E, which is a vowel sound. In general, in English, the letter Y is considered a vowel when it functions as a vowel sound in a word.
Yes, in the word "sky," the letter Y is functioning as a vowel.
no
Yes, the word "fly" has a vowel, which is the letter "y".
Y is not a vowel in "unlucky". U and U are the vowels.