Actually, there are more consonants that there are vowels in the alphabet.
The letters that are not vowels are called consonants. The vowels are A,E,I,O and U. Everything else is a consonant.
The British pronounce the last letter "zed", as do most Australians. Much more sensible than "zee" which can be confused with "cee" and other letters.
In your question you list the Latin alphabet, the set of 26 letters used by several languages including English. Present-day Russian is written in a version of the Cyrillic alphabet (develped by Saint Cyril) with about 32 letters. There are more than 5 vowels because vowels have both a "hard" and a "soft" sound. There were additional letters that were once used, but were eliminated in the early 20th Century. There are also other languages using the alphabet that might not have exactly the same set of letters. You can see the shapes of the letters by gong to wikipedia.org and searching for "Russian alphabet" (for the letter set used specificaly in Russian) or "Cyrillic Script" (for more samples, including some used by languages other than Russian).
If you count each version of an alphabet as unique (for example, the English version of the Latin alphabet and the Spanish version of the Latin alphabet would be counted separately), then there are more than 100,000 alphabets.If you are referring only to base alphabets, such as the Latin alphabet, the Cyrillic, Alphabet, etc, and you only include pure alphabets that represent both vowels and consonants, there are about 20. Notable examples are:LatinGreekCyrillicArmenianHangul (Korean)ArmenianGeorgian
Unless this is a riddle, there are no words in the English alphabet, other than "I" and "a" (and in archaic texts, "O").
The letters that are not vowels are called consonants. The vowels are A,E,I,O and U. Everything else is a consonant.
There is no such word. A CONSONANT is any letter of the alphabet other than a.e,i,o,u (the vowels).
Both are phonetic systems, however the Phoenician Alphabet has no vowels, and it more accurately called an "Abjad" rather than an "Alphabet".
The letter S. (18,824 words)
There are 6 vowels and 7 consonants so there is 1 more consonant
No, there are surnames that don't start with every letter of the alphabet. For example, surnames starting with the letter "Q" are less common than those starting with other letters.
Yes. The letters B, V, and T are all vowels. Especially in Indiana. -Pat
Peter Roach characterizes long vowels as sounds that are produced with a longer duration than short vowels, typically with a greater muscular effort in the vocal tract. They are often represented in the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) with a symbol that has a colon after the letter to indicate length, such as [iː] for the long vowel "ee" in "beet."
The last letter is Z the half way letter is M. I hope that helps other than that I cannot help.
Vowels are crucial in language as they help distinguish between words and convey meaning. Without vowels, it would be difficult to comprehend and differentiate between different words and phrases. They are essential for clear communication and understanding in language.
All languages that use the Latin alphabet have the letter A, which is more than 1000 languages. There is also a very similar looking letter in both the Cyrillic alphabet and the Greek alphabet.
The British pronounce the last letter "zed", as do most Australians. Much more sensible than "zee" which can be confused with "cee" and other letters.