Same vowel but different consonants, I guess the question asks, same vowel sounds but different consonant sounds, like phone and throne like deep sleep these are known as rhyming words often used in poetry. Avani Bhatnagar English Language Trainer
One example of a word with 6 consonants and 1 vowel is "strength."
Vowels and consonants are letters, not words. In the word "pick", the letter "i" is a vowel and the other three letters are consonants.
Some five letter words with only one vowel are:berthbirchbirthblendblindblondblownbrownchampchickchirpchurnclampclerkclickclockclothclumpcrownditchdrilldrinkdrolldrownfifthflirtfrontgirthglassglintgrassgrindhatchhitchknackknockknownshirtshortslackslantslickslothslumpspellspillsportspurnstampstandstartstringthingthirsttrust
The word unload is a verb. Words are not consonants or vowels, words have consonants and vowels. unload has 3 vowels (u,o,a) and 3 consonants (n,l,d)
The repetition of a vowel sound within words is called vowel harmony. It is a phenomenon where vowels within a word are influenced by each other and tend to follow a pattern of similarity or agreement in terms of features like frontness, backness, or roundedness.
The word dish is a noun. We don't say a word is a consonant or a vowel because words are made up of consonants and vowels. Dish has 3 consonants -- d,s,h. Dish has one vowel -- i
There are possibly thousands of words. Fart.
Data' is a word spelled with alternating consonants and vowels. Other words with this consonant and vowel pattern are bonobo and tomato.
No, "memories" and "enemies" do not rhyme. The words have different vowel sounds and end with different syllable sounds.
No,a vowel in the English language is a letter. There are five, a,e,i,o, and u. These letters are connectors for the consonants. Together, consonants and vowels, make up words. The word square has two vowels, a and e.
Monosyllabic words and their derivatives have a short vowel. A vowel followed by a single consonant and an 'e' is long. A vowel followed by a single consonant and a different vowel is likely to be long. A vowel followed by two consonants is short. There are exceptions, of course, and you just have to learn them I'm afraid.
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.