m or v A consonant is any letter that is not a vowel. A vowel is a i o e u
Letter 'm' is a consonant. In Japanese the only consonant is 'n'. The rest of the characters are 'syllables'. They are made of merging a consonant with each of the five vowels (a, i, u, e, o) creating that letter's 5-character group. In case of 'M' it would be:ま (ma) み (mi) む (mu) め (me) も (mo) in hiragana and マ (ma) ミ (mi) ム (mu) メ (me) モ (mo) in katakana.The letter 'M' itself is called エム /e mu/ in Japanese. It is pronounced /em/ at the end of which 'm' is consonant, so it turns to 'mu' => 'emu', to be pronounceable for the Japanese.
The Japanese language does not have an equivalent for the letter M. The only single consonant that can be used is N, which is used a full syllable.
No, 'm' is not a vowel. Vowels are the letters 'a', 'e', 'i', 'o', and 'u'. 'M' is a consonant.
In the English language the only letter that can be considered a consonant or a vowel is the letter Y. The letter W is a consonant.
consonant
Yes.
a consonant is a letter that is not a vowel.
The letter "Y" is considered a consonant in many cases, but it can also function as a vowel when it produces a vowel sound, such as in the word "yes" or "beyond."
A consonant is any letter other than a vowel.
X is always a consonant.
Letterits in the alphabetIt is a consonant