In the traditional saying, "A, E, I, O, U, and sometimes Y", the letters refer to the vowels of the modern English alphabet.
It is what people sometimes say instead of hello or hi. But with the extra 'y's on the end, it probably means hello but typed on a website with chat.
The 'y' in sphynx is the vowel .... a,e,i,o,u and sometimes y.
y = and el = he
In nouns that end with a consonant and Y, the final Y is dropped and the letters ies are added to make the word plural. In words that end with a vowel and Y, the final Y is retained and an S is added, unless that final vowel is a U.
Il y a means "there is / there are" in English.
Sometimes it sounds hard without -y or -ly
sometimes
A E I O U Are the vowels And sometimes the letter Y is a vowel, such as my, any
Y - why
It is what people sometimes say instead of hello or hi. But with the extra 'y's on the end, it probably means hello but typed on a website with chat.
a e o u and SOMETIMES y. its in its own classification.
The y variable! Sometimes called the dependent variable.
yes because there is A,E,I,O,U, and sometimes Y
Here's an explanation of Y as a consonant: http://www.phonicsontheweb.com/y-roles.php
y=Why
Yes. The vowels are a,e,i,o,u and sometimes y (and w!).
The 'y' in sphynx is the vowel .... a,e,i,o,u and sometimes y.