allot, baked, caked, domed, enter, famed, gamed, homed, inter, julep, knife, limes, mimes, nines, otter, pipes, quick, ropes, stoop, troop, utter, vowel, water, Xerox, yodel, zoned
allot, baked, caked, domed, enter, famed, gamed, homed, inter, julep, knife, limes, mimes, nines, otter, pipes, quick, ropes, stoop, troop, utter, vowel, water, Xerox, yodel, zoned
vowels and consonants
5 vowels. 8 consonants. :)
In the word DAUGHTER, there are 3 vowels namely, A, U, and E, and 5 consonants namely, D, G, H, T, and R. Number of ways of selecting 2 vowels out of 3 vowels = Number of ways of selecting 3 consonants out of 5 consonants = Therefore, number of combinations of 2 vowels and 3 consonants = 3 × 10 = 30 Each of these 30 combinations of 2 vowels and 3 consonants can be arranged among themselves in 5! ways. Hence, required number of different words = 30 × 5! = 3600
Alarm, alert, apart, bacon, beast, cable, cargo, dance, early, earth, enter, frame, gavel, infer, lemon, mango, maybe and mayor are 5 letter word with 2 vowels and 3 consonants. Additional words include nerve, noisy, quiet, ridge, spoon, trace, uncle, under, verse, vocal, whale and yeast.
The word "den" has one vowel, which is the letter "e."
run, ran, bin, tin, and so on.
stuck on Mario too
There are 9 letters in "Ladybirds" 7 consonants and 2 vowels although Y is sometimes treated as another vowel.
The first name has 3 vowels and 7 consonants and in the second name there are only 2 vowels and 3 consonants, the middle name consists of only the consonant 'B' which means that therefore the name Rutherford B Hayes has 5 vowels and 11 consonants, so there are less vowels that consonants.In this context the letter 'y' is not considered a vowel.It is only considered and vowel in words like hymn and mythwhere the letter has an individual sound.
Any
lessons
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.