The second consonant in "Sophocles" is the letter "p".
CVC stands for consonant-vowel-consonant, which refers to a three-letter word with a consonant-vowel-consonant pattern (e.g., cat, dog). CCVC stands for consonant-consonant-vowel-consonant and refers to a four-letter word with a consonant-consonant-vowel-consonant pattern (e.g., crab, trip).
v/cv
No, "igloo" is a vowel-consonant-consonant-vowel word pattern. The vowels in "igloo" are 'i' and 'o', and the consonants are 'g' and 'l'.
No, "credit" is not a VCV pattern after a consonant. In the word "credit," the "cre" is a closed syllable (consonant-vowel-consonant) pattern.
I'm probably not the right person to answer this. I will still help though! Google it and the second answer is helpful (: I hope this helped!!
There is no silent consonant in the word "music".
C
Words that have the VCCCV (Vowel-Consonant- Consonant-Consonant-Vowel) pattern are divided into syllables between the first and second consonants, as in the wordap/proach. The sounds of the second and third consonants are blended together.
This is a word that is formed of: first a consonant, second a vowel, and third a consonant. Some examples are: can, jam, peg, den, bin, fit, cot, dot, cut, bun.
First off, its "vowel" and "consonant". Second off, the letter O is a vowel, not a consonant.
In the word "method", the first, third, fourth and sixth letters are consonants; while the second and fifth letters are vowels.
The word science has one silent consonant: the first c. Note that it also has one silent vowel: the second e.
consonant vowel consonant............:)
When you are changing a regular English verb from the present tense to another form, if the verb ends in a consonant, you sometimes add a second consonant of the same type before you add the suffix. example:swim>swimmed run>running
He wrote 123 plays, and when he competed he never placed lower then second in a competition.
When you are changing a regular English verb from the present tense to another form, if the verb ends in a consonant, you sometimes add a second consonant of the same type before you add the suffix. example:swim>swimmed run>running
give me a sample of what is a consence