No, "human" is not a VCCCV word. Instead, it is a disyllabic word with the structure VCV, where V represents a vowel and C represents a consonant.
A VCCCV word is a word that contains a pattern of vowels and consonants, typically with a vowel-consonant-consonant-vowel-consonant-consonant structure. Examples of VCCCV words include "basketball" and "mismatch."
No...because first vowel is 'u' and eding vowel is 'e'.And in between both vowels are three consonants 'tch'.So it is a vcccv pattern. Naila.
Human has two syllables. Hu-man.
The root word that means people or human is "anthropo-", derived from the Greek word "anthrōpos" meaning human being.
The Sanskrit word for human resources is "Manav Sansadhan" (मानव संसाधन).
Yes because sandwich has a vcccv pattern, sandwich. The bold letters are the vcccv pattern.
I DONT KNOW! :( I think its VCCCV though...
A VCCCV word is a word that contains a pattern of vowels and consonants, typically with a vowel-consonant-consonant-vowel-consonant-consonant structure. Examples of VCCCV words include "basketball" and "mismatch."
yes
VCCV
Entry
vcccv pumpkin
The word "kingdom" is a VCCV pattern, with the consonants "ng" representing the first part of the second syllable in the word.
no
complain
vccv
Yes, the word "orphan" has a VCCCV structure. It consists of a vowel (o), followed by a consonant (r), another consonant (p), another consonant (h), and ends with a vowel (a) and a consonant (n). The structure can be broken down into the segments: V (o) - CC (r, p) - C (h) - V (a) - C (n).