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In both of those words Y is considered a vowel. It is a consonant when it is used before a vowel at the beginning of a words or when it separates two vowels.
Only has a long vowel! It is one of those English words that can be hard to tell. If only had a short vowel it would sound like this "on-ly"
The article "an" is used in front of words that start with a vowel. a dog an otter
The difference in usage between "an" and "a" has mostly to do with vowel sounds. "An" is used in front of words if they begin with a vowel sound even if they begin with a consonant. Because MP is pronounce em-pE, it is given "an."
"Luciferous" is one of those words that uses every vowel except for an A.
apple, orange, hour, umbrella, igloo, elephant - any word beginning with a vowel or a vowel sound uses the article "an"
An is the indefinite article. It is used before words beginning with a vowel sound, for example an apple, an elder, an hour, another. It is shortened to a before words beginning with a consonant sound, for example a bat, a cat, a union, a European.Some words beginning with h may take the full form anwhen accented on the second or third syllable. For example we say a history but we may say an historian.Answerbefore a word beginning with a vowel, a-e-i-o-uAnswerUSUALLY, but not always, before a Vowel. Such as A Human Being, but An Explorer. A Tree but An Apple
R is not a vowel.
Some words ending in the vowel O are:bongobravohalohelloherojellopianopolopotatoshampoosilosolotattootomatoweirdozero
Some words ending in the vowel O are:bongobravohalohelloherojellopianopolopotatoshampoosilosolotattootomatoweirdozero
what words have the same vowel sound as bin
Yes, the O in lock is a short vowel. In words with a single vowel, and words ending in "ck," the vowel is almost always short.