Rhythm, although that is really cheating because 'y' is used as a vowel.
It is a short O, which in many words sounds similar to a short A (ah or uh). It rhymes with cot, dot, got, hot, lot, not, rot, sot, and tot.
There are 54,051 words that begin with a vowel in Webster's Second International dictionary, alone. That is too many to list.
No. Y is always a consonant, not a vowel, and it cannot change actual form. However, in many words, such as "by", it represents the vowel sound.
That depends on your definition of the word vowel. All English words have vowel sounds in them, but the word rhythm does not contain a,e,i,o, or u.
In bangla words are two vowel.
2 or more
R is not a vowel.
"Give" and "oddball" are not vowel words. Vowel words are words that contain a vowel as one of their main sounds. In "give," the main vowel sound is "i," a vowel; in "oddball," the main vowel sounds are "o" and "a," both vowels.
Some words ending in the vowel O are:bongobravohalohelloherojellopianopolopotatoshampoosilosolotattootomatoweirdozero
Some words that have the same short a vowel sound as 'sandy' are man, hand, and back. Also the word 'candy' which not only has the same short a vowel sound, but it rhymes with 'sandy' too. Not that it would be handy if you got your candy sandy.
It only has 4 Vowels. Which are : U, A, I, O
If we consider AY and OY as vowel pairs, many words have Y as a vowel. Unless it is making a consonant Y sound as in yet or yellow, it is a vowel. It can have a long I, short I, or long E sound.Words where Y is the only vowel include by, try, why, myth, hymn, and rhythm.