ugli
Some verbs beginning with the vowel 'A':ActAbolishAcceptAbbreviateAccomplishAchieveAttendAssembleAvoidSome verbs beginning with the vowel 'E'ElaborateEditEliminateEmbarkElectEjectEnterErodeSome verbs beginning with the vowel 'I'IlluminateIgnoreImpeachImmunizeImagineImportImproveImpressSome verbs beginning with the vowel 'O'ObserveObsessOpenObtainOffloadObeyOmitSome verbs beginning with the vowel 'U'UnbuttonUnbuckleUnderestimateUnderlineUndoUnite
There is no schwa sound. The A is part of the R sound (umlaut A), the I and the E are short vowel sounds. (ar-ki-tekt)
SushiKiwiGranolaCornflakeNectarinePancakeAppleCheeseJalapenoChiliSesameHalveMarinade
The final consonant is doubled before a suffix if it's preceded by a short vowel, like theu in run, but unlike camp, where there is another consonant before the final sound.
Opera d'arte is an Italian equivalent of 'work of art'. In the word by word translation, the feminine gender noun 'opera' means 'work'. The preposition 'di'* means 'of'. The feminine gender noun 'arte' means 'art'.*The preposition drops its vowel 'i' before 'arte', which begins with the vowel 'a'. The apostrophe indicates the temporary dropping of the preposition's vowel.
The alpha, or any other short vowel ending of a Greek prefix metamorphoses into a longer vowel, usually eta, when combining a prefix with a root word beginning with a vowel.
A European. It's pretty confusing since it's first letter is a vowel, but it doesn't have a vowel sound. The starting syllable is more of a 'you' sound. 'Y' isn't a vowel.
The analogous word for trip ending with the vowel y could be journey.
Some words ending in the vowel O are:bongobravohalohelloherojellopianopolopotatoshampoosilosolotattootomatoweirdozero
The second vowel in the work nuclei would be "E". The vowels are A,E,I,O and U.
Some words ending in the vowel O are:bongobravohalohelloherojellopianopolopotatoshampoosilosolotattootomatoweirdozero
No, but in words ending in "W", it often sounds like a vowel.
Yes. It is an ending vowel with a long E sound. If a Y is ahead of a vowel and has a YUH sound, it is considered a consonant. Otherwise it is a vowel.
Words ending with il and no vowel before it include:anvilcivilcouncildevilevilfossilgerbillentilpencilperilpupilstenciltonsiluntilvigilweevil
A European. The vowel rule does not apply because Eu creates the consonant 'yu' sound at the beginning of European.
present when the words have the same ending constant vowel sound but the vowel sounds are different (perch-porch)
Examples of nouns ending in -y that is preceded by a vowel:alleyboycaychimneydaydonkeyessayjoykeymonkeyplaytoyturkeyvalleyway