Yugoslavian.
(a person from Yugoslavia)
No, smoky is not an open syllable word. It has two syllables. Smok-y
The word mystery has three syllable. Mys-ter-y
Valery
The word cemetery is stressed on the first syllable. (cem-e-ter-y)
I think yes because the -y- is acting like a vowel and an open syllable is when nothing comes after the vowel. Fro exmaple the word he. We say that the vowel is open.
No, it is a two syllable word: stead-y
Yogic is a word. It begins with y and ends with c.
No, smoky is not an open syllable word. It has two syllables. Smok-y
"Steady" has two syllables. Stead-y.
The word "syllable" is spelled as s-y-l-l-a-b-l-e.
Man-y. There are 2 syllables in that word.
The word any has two syllables. An-y.
fa' mil y
Yes, "victory" is a two-syllable word with the first syllable stressed: VIC-tor-y.
Y is a consonant for its general pronunciation and in the phonetic alphabets. Y is a consonant when it begins a word like yellow, yell, year, yearn, yes, yarn, yard, etc. or if it begins a syllable like mayor, layer, kayak, etc. However, although Y is generally a consonant, it can sometimes behave like a vowel, so Y can be considered as a semi-vowel, but not a real vowel. The real vowel includes, A, E, I, O and U. If the Y ends a word like cry, try, fly, hay, pay, day, may etc., it's through a syllable like byte, hymn, Lyn, lynx, type, krypton, dye, symptom, etc., if it ends a syllable like Tyler, Taylor, hyper, dynamic, python, maybe, tyrant, hybrid, hypothesis, pylon, etc., or if it begins a word or a syllable but the following letter is a consonant like yttrium, ytterbium, etc. then the Y behaves like a vowel.
Yes, y is a vowel in heavy because it makes a syllable in this word.
Year