None - unless you use the word 'and' as a separator - For example 'one hundred and fifty' as opposed to 'one hundred fifty'
zero
Yes, the 'a' in "have" has a short vowel sound, pronounced as /æ/.
grep -in '[aeiou]' filename.txt -i means to ignore case and -n will give you the line number that the vowel occurs in.
There are five vowel sounds in English: a, e, i, o, u.
Yes such as in the word my y would be the vowel because at certain times y has to be a vowel.
A perfect rhyme occurs between two words or phrases in which the stressed vowel sound in each word is identical, and the articulation that precedes the vowel is not the same. An example of a perfect rhyme occurs between the words lamppost and almost.
There is no schwa in ego. Both vowel sounds of the word are pronounced clearly, as in ee-go, while a schwa occurs with an unstressed vowel sound.
There are many ways one can determine the number of syllables in a word. One way you can count a syllable is by counting the number of times one hears a vowel.
Yes. By definition a VCCV word had two syllables with a pattern of Vowel-Consonant-Consonat- Vowel in the middle. An additional constraint is that the break into two syllables occurs after the first consonant.
paraphernalia
Unusually
A vowel.