The word dish is a noun. We don't say a word is a consonant or a vowel because words are made up of consonants and vowels.
Dish has 3 consonants -- d,s,h.
Dish has one vowel -- i
Omitted consonant
The name James is a vowel consonant e word but s is not a suffix.
Dish has a short vowel sound.
The article "an" is used before a word when the word begins with a vowel. "A" is used when the word begins with a consonant. The exceptions are when the word begins with a consonant but it sounds like a vowel, or when it begins with a vowel but it sounds like a consonant. There are very few exceptions. And I cannot think of one at the moment.
If the word ends in a consonant-vowel-consonant pattern it gets a double consonant +EDe.g. RUB > RUBBED HOP > HOPPEDIf the word ends in a consonant-vowel-consonant pattern it gets a double consonant +INGe.g. RUB > RUBBING HOP > HOPPINGWords ending in w,x,y,z don't follow this rule, just add ED or ING e.g. snowed, snowing, boxed, boxing
Day is a word, not a vowel or consonant. The word "Day" has the following make up: D: consonant A: vowel Y: both The consonant "d"-sound is followed by the vowel-consonant "-ay" sound.
Yes, "yell" is considered a consonant-vowel-delal consonant (C-V-C) word. The "y" at the beginning acts as a consonant, the "e" in the middle is a vowel, and the double "l" at the end are both consonants.
VCCV stands for vowel consonant consonant vowel. Suspend is a VCCV word because u is a vowel, s is a consonant, p is a consonant, and e is a vowel. VCCV!
Consonants are letters of the alphabet that are not vowels. When constructing a sentence, simply include words that contain consonants alongside vowels to form meaningful communication. Consonants help create the majority of sounds in words.
"icicles" is: vowel, consonant, vowel, consonant, consonant, vowel, consonant. Or VCVCCVC. If that's even what you mean. There are words referred to as "consonant, vowel, consonant" words, but they are always three letters long. A "consonant vowel" word would only be two letter long, like : be. So I'm not sure what you're asking here.
The word olive does follow the vowel-consonant-vowel pattern.Remember that the only vowels in the American Alphabet are A,E,I,O, and U; Everything else is a consonant.When the word olive is broken down into letters:O (vowel)L (consonant)I (vowel)V (consonant)E (vowel)
A vowel consonant E syllable is a syllable that consists of a vowel followed by a consonant and then an "E." The presence of the silent "E" at the end of the syllable often affects the pronunciation of the vowel, making it long instead of short.
The vowels in this word are a, and y. The consonant is b.
Omitted consonant
consonant vowel consonant............:)
that's not a question
* consonant - vowel - consonant (C V C ) examples: bat, dig, bus * consonant - vowel - consonant - consonant (C V C C) ex. back, ring, bust * consonant - consonant - vowel - consonant (C C V C), shot, prim, trap * vowel - consonant - vowel - consonant (V C V C) open, opal, emit * consonant, vowel, vowel, consonant (C V V C) pool, seed, hook * consonant, vowel, consonant, consonant, vowel (C V C C V) paste, maple, dance