Pasta. Paste. Waste. Haste. Taste. Caste. Pasha. Lucky. Lacky. Salty. Silty. Silky. Sulky. Ladle. Table. Sabre. Morse. Terse. Purse. Manta. Canto. Cable. Pulse. Palsy. Pansy. Panty. Candy. Handy. Dirty. Manly. Culpa.
Most of these depend on whether or not you consider 'Y' to be a vowel.
Some words that fit this pattern are "basket" and "pencil."
Gears Seats Bears Boats Rainy Coats
"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.
bananabecamebecomebehavebehovebemusebesidebetakebetidebolerocalicocameraCanadacaninecoherecoyotecupolacuratedamagedativedebatedecadedecidedecodedefamedefinedefusedemisedemurederivedesiredevotedividedominofacilefigurefixateforagefutilefuturegaragegazebogenerahumanejabirujacanalobatemanagemotivemutatenativepapayaparadepotatorecederecoderemakeresideresiteresizeretakeretireretunesafarisecedeSomalitomatovivacevotive
1. In words such as salad, you have a VCV pattern (vowel-consonant-vowel), in which the first vowel is short. The syllable division of such words is generally done after the consonant, i.e, as VC-V.
CANADA!
Almost any word you can think of that has a double consonant preceeded by a vowel will have a short vowel sound, just as almost any word with a single consonant after the vowel will make the vowel a long sound. A few words that have a short vowel sound followed by a double consonant are: batter, better, bitter, butter, hemming, teller, messier and letter.
The terms 'consonant' and 'vowel' refer to individual letters, not words.
There are many such words. One pattern involves two syllables, each of which is consonant-vowel-consonant. Examples of words in this pattern are patter, mother, father, morbid, torpor, putrid, rotten, and turgid. Variants involving a syllable that is consonant-consonant-vowel include nettle, cattle, gravid, and placid.
The VCCV syllabification rule states that when dividing words into syllables, a consonant blend (two or more consonants that appear together) is typically split in between the consonants. For example, in the word "rabbit," the syllabification would be rab-bit, with the consonant blend "bb" split between the two syllables.
consonant vowel consonant ending in e
Words that have the VCCCV (Vowel-Consonant- Consonant-Consonant-Vowel) pattern are divided into syllables between the first and second consonants, as in the wordap/proach. The sounds of the second and third consonants are blended together.