The question doesn't make sense. A "vowel" is only one letter. So the question is asking "What one Greek letter begins with e?" I think the word you're looking for is epsilon, the fifth letter of the Greek alphabet.
The word for vowels in greek is Φωνήεντα (fonee-e-nda).
Vowels.
Phoenician - 22 letters, no vowels; Greek 16 letters including vowels.
Greek has 24 lettersHebrew has 22 consonants and no vowels.
No. It was Greek.
One of them is "iota."
α, ε, ι, υ, η, ο
The Ancient Greek word for hope is 'ελπις'. It is pronounced el-pis (both the 'e' and the 'i' are short vowels.).
Foníenta, pronounced "fo-NEE-eh-da" and written φωνήεντα, is a Greek equivalent of the English word "vowels." The vowels take the following forms and names: α alpha, ε epsilon, η eta, ι iota, ο omicron, υ upsilon and ω omega. The respective pronunciations will be "a," "eh," "ee," "ee", "o," "ee" and "o" in Aeginan Greek.
Greek has letters for consonants and vowels, and is the first writing system to have both.The Hebrew alphabet only has consonants, and originally had no way of writing vowels. A system for indicating vowels using dots and dashes was developed in the 10th century and is used today in some books, particularly prayer books, poetry books, and children's books. But most publications do not include vowels.
Vowels were not invented by any one person. They have always been a fundamental part of human language and communication, evolving naturally over time in various languages.
long vowels and short vowels are both just vowels they can't have more or less of themselves