That is not accurate. Numerous words end in other letters if that's your meaning.
No 5 letter word in the English language starts with the letter O and ends with the letter Z.
In English, "o te reo Māori" translates to "the Māori language."
O is not an article, but it is a vowel (a, e, i, o, u). A, an, and the are the only articles in the English language.
It is pronounced the same as the o in the English language but held out longer.
yo in america english
J. O Kettridge has written: 'French-English and English-French dictionary of commercial & financial terms,phrases, & practice' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, French, Commerce, Finance, English language, English, French language
One.
Oman
O. R Reuter has written: 'Swedish-English dictionary' -- subject(s): Swedish language, Dictionaries, English
A noun in English could end with any letter of the alphabet. The only language I know of in which every noun ends with the same letter is Esperanto, where a noun ends with "o." In some languages, the greatest number of nouns have one of a limited set of endings (as "us," "a," and "um" in Latin, or "o" and "a" in Spanish).
This depends on what you consider a vowel and what words you consider included in the English language. There are about 310 words without a,e,i,o, or u.
L. O. Clarke has written: 'A vocabulary Manipuri to English dictionary' -- subject(s): Manipuri language, Dictionaries, English