Depends on language but in English there are none
All days of the week end in "Y"
Because they al l have day at the end
Only on Days That End in 'Y' was created in 1995.
Tomorrow
The day of the week that follows Tuesday is W-e-d-n-e-s-d-a-y (Wednesday).
celebrated on the second week of may. todays mother day 10th may (Y)
Tuesday is the best day of the week because Natalie has lots of fun at a special place with special people :L hehee Good timesss (y)
To form the plural of a noun ending in y, you generally change the y to i and add es. Examples include country (countries) and baby (babies). However, there are exceptions like boy (boys) where you just add s.
This is an equation in the form y = mx + b. Let x = the number of weeks, y = the amount she has at the end of any given week, m = the amount she saves every week, and b = the amount she started with. Plug in your values for y, m, and b, and you will have the equation.
Only on the days that don't end in the letter Y.
The only English option is the word "you."
No, it doesn't. Adding a y to the end of a word usually makes it an adjective. Example: rain to rainy (It was a rainy day.) Smell to smelly, sun to sunny Many adjectives also end in a y, but usually have an -ly at the end. example: fastly, quickly, steadily, etc.
The only English words that end with Q are tranq, umiaq.