CVC stands for consonant-vowel-consonant, which refers to a three-letter word with a consonant-vowel-consonant pattern (e.g., cat, dog). CCVC stands for consonant-consonant-vowel-consonant and refers to a four-letter word with a consonant-consonant-vowel-consonant pattern (e.g., crab, trip).
Consonant is - katinig
no
Consonant is a noun.
No, "igloo" is a vowel-consonant-consonant-vowel word pattern. The vowels in "igloo" are 'i' and 'o', and the consonants are 'g' and 'l'.
A graph need not have a trend: it is no big deal.
consonant vowel consonant............:)
The number of boxes on graph paper depends on the size and dimensions of the paper. A standard grid paper may have 4 squares per inch, resulting in 16 boxes per square inch. However, larger grid papers may have more boxes.
it is used for big jumps between big gaps and big numbers
It's VCCV. (vowel consonant consonant vowel)
give me a sample of what is a consence
archetchinch
Nope its a consonant.
b/c of big values which are in the form of exponents and powers,we use semilog graph.....
There are no common English words with 6 consonants and no vowels. However, the compound words archchronicler, catchphrase, and latchstring all have 6 consonants in a row.
no. "s" is a consonant so "clothes" starts with a consonant and ends with a consonant
* consonant - vowel - consonant (C V C ) examples: bat, dig, bus * consonant - vowel - consonant - consonant (C V C C) ex. back, ring, bust * consonant - consonant - vowel - consonant (C C V C), shot, prim, trap * vowel - consonant - vowel - consonant (V C V C) open, opal, emit * consonant, vowel, vowel, consonant (C V V C) pool, seed, hook * consonant, vowel, consonant, consonant, vowel (C V C C V) paste, maple, dance