The answer to this is no. Ex: the word "by" has the letter "y" which is sometimes a vowel.
Yes, a word can be without a vowel if it consists only of consonants, like "rhythm" or "lynx." These words are less common in English but are still valid.
Without knowing the specific word, it is not possible to determine if the vowel sound is short or long. Vowels can have different sounds depending on the word they are in.
The Welsh word crwth, borrowed directly without Anglicised spelling, sometimes appears in English dictionaries. In proper English, w is a vowel only when combined with another vowel, as a diphthong such as how or in words like yawn.
No, "him" does not contain a long vowel sound. The vowel sound in "him" is short, as it is pronounced quickly without a prolonged sound.
The short vowel in the word "which" is the letter i.
The longest word in the English language without a vowel is "rhythms." It has seven letters and does not contain any vowels.
The largest word without vowel is rhythm etc..
the name of pakistani girls with out vowel word
Unless you count y as not being a vowel, no. If you don't count it as being a vowel, My is a word without a vowel.
By. (?) If the Y isn't counted as a vowel.
Twyndyllyngs
There aren't any English words without a vowel letter, unless you include vocal gesture words and vocalized pauses, like hmm and Shh.If "y" is used as a vowel, then it is considered a vowel letter. So the word rhythm is the longest word without a,e,i,o,and u, but it definitely has a vowel letter in it.
every word has at least one vowel... or a vowel sound, as in sky or my
Nope.
rhythm
'An' may be used without a vowel if it is followed by a word beginning with a silent consonant. An example of this would be: an hour.
It is floccinaucinihilipilification. This is what I keep trivia books for!!!
i think it is rhythm :)In the English language, every syllable has to have a vowel, so there is no word without a vowel. Words can have no consonants, but must have vowels. In the word rhythm, the y is a vowel, not a consonant.