v/cv
Vc/v
a vowel
1. In words such as salad, you have a VCV pattern (vowel-consonant-vowel), in which the first vowel is short. The syllable division of such words is generally done after the consonant, i.e, as VC-V.
You could put V or VC, those are the only two I know of.
s v c
Sentence patterns usually describe what part of speech goes first, second, third. For example, the most common sentence pattern in English is Subject-Verb-Object, often shortened to S-V-O, as in "She saw the movie." Another common sentence pattern is Subject-Verb-Complement, S-V-C, as in "He is cute." Questions in English are usually V-S, as in "Did they?"
Backward ran the sentences until reeled the mind.
tyrant is a V/CV pattern
v cv
v cv
v cv
Is equal a v/cv word
Is equal a v/cv word
Is equal a v/cv word
To tell you the truth I am stuck on this so all I can say is HARD! If I had my spelling professor her today I would be grateful!
The word "local" has a VC V pattern, where V represents a vowel and C represents a consonant.
"Shiver" follows the v cv pattern. It has one vowel followed by one consonant and ends with a vowel.
Comet is a V CV pattern, where the V represents the vowel sound and the C represents the consonant sound.
Vc v