You cannot produce a non-utterance in spoken language with vowels. Since written language is a representation of the spoken language, you cannot have words without vowels.Technically, no. "y" in the examples like shy is a vowel (as it makes a vowel sound); just like in loan words such as Gwn (whereby Welsh uses "w" as a vowel). A vowel is not defined by the letter that represents it but rather by the sound that is produced
There aren't any English words without a vowel letter, unless you include vocal gesture words and vocalized pauses, like hmm and Shh.If "y" is used as a vowel, then it is considered a vowel letter. So the word rhythm is the longest word without a,e,i,o,and u, but it definitely has a vowel letter in it.
i think it is rhythm :)In the English language, every syllable has to have a vowel, so there is no word without a vowel. Words can have no consonants, but must have vowels. In the word rhythm, the y is a vowel, not a consonant.
There me be a longer one, but it aint sky. It is rythm.
In this word, it is a vowel.
Vowel teams are a word with two vowel's
The largest word without vowel is rhythm etc..
the name of pakistani girls with out vowel word
Unless you count y as not being a vowel, no. If you don't count it as being a vowel, My is a word without a vowel.
By. (?) If the Y isn't counted as a vowel.
Twyndyllyngs
The answer to this is no. Ex: the word "by" has the letter "y" which is sometimes a vowel.
There aren't any English words without a vowel letter, unless you include vocal gesture words and vocalized pauses, like hmm and Shh.If "y" is used as a vowel, then it is considered a vowel letter. So the word rhythm is the longest word without a,e,i,o,and u, but it definitely has a vowel letter in it.
every word has at least one vowel... or a vowel sound, as in sky or my
rhythm
Nope.
'An' may be used without a vowel if it is followed by a word beginning with a silent consonant. An example of this would be: an hour.
It is floccinaucinihilipilification. This is what I keep trivia books for!!!