The word agreement has a schwa sound (uh), a GR digraph, a long E sound, an M sound, and another schwa sound in ENT (ehnt/unt).
The word cash begins and ends with consonant sounds, the c and the sh. The middle letter a is a vowel.
The article "an" is used before a word when the word begins with a vowel. "A" is used when the word begins with a consonant. The exceptions are when the word begins with a consonant but it sounds like a vowel, or when it begins with a vowel but it sounds like a consonant. There are very few exceptions. And I cannot think of one at the moment.
A. Use "a" before consonant sounds and "an" before vowel sounds.
Day is a word, not a vowel or consonant. The word "Day" has the following make up: D: consonant A: vowel Y: both The consonant "d"-sound is followed by the vowel-consonant "-ay" sound.
Yes, "yell" is considered a consonant-vowel-delal consonant (C-V-C) word. The "y" at the beginning acts as a consonant, the "e" in the middle is a vowel, and the double "l" at the end are both consonants.
VCCV stands for vowel consonant consonant vowel. Suspend is a VCCV word because u is a vowel, s is a consonant, p is a consonant, and e is a vowel. VCCV!
No, consonance is the repetition of consonants. A more specific form of consonance is alliteration, where the first consonant of a word is repeated. Assonance is the repetition of vowel sounds.
The articles a and an are used for an unspecified item or person.The form AN is used when the immediately following word begins with a vowel sound (not necessarily a vowel, as with a silent H). The form A is used before a vowel that has a consonant sound.Examples :A large crowdAn unruly crowdBut :An honest man (sounds like ah-nist)A united front (sounds like yoo-ny-ted)A one-armed man (sounds like won)
Consonants are letters of the alphabet that are not vowels. When constructing a sentence, simply include words that contain consonants alongside vowels to form meaningful communication. Consonants help create the majority of sounds in words.
It is a consonant because there are already e's in the word. Therefore, y would be a consanant. Y is a vowel in everybody. It doesn't matter how many ee's are in the word it depends on how the word is pronounced. (ĕvˈrē-bŏdˌē)
Sounding out words by separating a larger word into the smaller sounds (both vowel and consonant sounds and blends) that make it up.
"icicles" is: vowel, consonant, vowel, consonant, consonant, vowel, consonant. Or VCVCCVC. If that's even what you mean. There are words referred to as "consonant, vowel, consonant" words, but they are always three letters long. A "consonant vowel" word would only be two letter long, like : be. So I'm not sure what you're asking here.