Coogee
Some words that start with a vowel and end in a Y are:animosityanyelectrifyenemyeveryexactlyonlyorneryuglyusury
Some words ending in the vowel O are:bongobravohalohelloherojellopianopolopotatoshampoosilosolotattootomatoweirdozero
sh
R is not a vowel.
Some six letter words that end in double letters:accessacrossapogeebamboobefallboo booboohoobungeebypasscaresscoffeecouleecuckoodecreedegreeduressegressembossenrollentreeexcessgoateeharassHawaiilayofflycheemorassmuumuupayoffpeeweepizazzrebuffrecallrecessrefillremissripoffrunoffscrollscruffsetteeshrillsoireesquallstressstrolltarifftattoothrilltoffeetoupeeunlessvoodoo
Some words that start with a vowel and end in a Y are:animosityanyelectrifyenemyeveryexactlyonlyorneryuglyusury
Some words ending in the vowel O are:bongobravohalohelloherojellopianopolopotatoshampoosilosolotattootomatoweirdozero
Words ending with il and no vowel before it include:anvilcivilcouncildevilevilfossilgerbillentilpencilperilpupilstenciltonsiluntilvigilweevil
halohellopoloweirdosilobravosolopianotattoozeroshampoobongo
Almost any word you can think of that has a double consonant preceeded by a vowel will have a short vowel sound, just as almost any word with a single consonant after the vowel will make the vowel a long sound. A few words that have a short vowel sound followed by a double consonant are: batter, better, bitter, butter, hemming, teller, messier and letter.
z is not a vowel
All three words . . . -- include the letters 'R' and 'M', and at least one vowel -- end in 'R' - [vowel] - 'M' -- end in [vowel] - 'M' -- end in 'M'
In words like "slope", the "e" at the end indicates that the "o" is long, whereas in "slop" it would be short. In the case of words like "slope", the "e" itself is not pronounced at all. A short vowel is usually, but not always, followed by a consonant. There are some words that end in a short vowel. There is no general rule for this. The vowel "o" at the end of a word is long. In words that derive from Latin, the vowel "i" at the end is long. The vowel "u" at the end of a word is long, examples being "zebu" and "malibu". Otherwise in English there is no indication in the spelling as to whether a vowel is long or short; it is necessary to learn the correct pronunciation for each word.
sh
empire
To form the past tense of a word by doubling the consonant, typically double the final consonant when adding "-ed" only if the word meets the following criteria: 1) one syllable, 2) ends in a single vowel followed by a consonant, 3) has the stress on the final syllable, and 4) is not ending in "w", "x", or "y". Examples include "shop" (shopped), "bop" (bopped), and "plan" (planned).
Aloha: 'Ae (yes)