Vowels make up 40% of the alphabet.
The 5 vowels a,e,i,o and u as well as the 7 consonants h,k,l,m,n,p, and w make up the entire Hawaiian alphabet.
The letter c is a consonant.The consonants ch make a distinctive sound different from the consonants th.Consonants and vowels make up words.
The alphabet contains 12 letters: 5 vowels (a, e, i, o, u) and 7 consonants (h, k, l, m, n, p, w). To simplify pronunciation, sound consonants as in English and break up words so they are easy to say e.g., Waianapanapa sounds like Wai-a-napa-napa.
The Latin alphabet was adapted from the Etruscan alphabet, which was ultimately derived from the Greek alphabet. Its use spread throughout the Roman Empire and became the basis for many modern alphabets, including the English alphabet.
Japanese symbols can either be categorized as kanji, katakana, or hiragana. Kanji comes from China, hiragana is how they first learn to use their system of the alphabet, and katakana is either used to pronounce a word that wasn't originally in their language, or is sometimes used as a replacement for hiragana to stress a particular word or meaning. Kanji is like a short hand for hiragana. It can best be compare to how in English instead of writing out the word "and", one would substitute the symbol "&". Hiragana and katakana are broken up into their version of the alphabet by what they have for pronunciations. They can be viewed at the links below. These Japanese symbols, or pronunciations, are usually grouped with a vowel, not including the actual vowels. The pronunciations of the vowels are used exactly like the ones in Spanish and are very simple, unlike the English vowels that have a long and short sounds. But once you get down how the vowels are pronounced, reading the rest of their alphabet is a cake walk since it is based off of being grouped with those same vowels. Writing hiragana and katakana is also similar to English in how it is written. In hiragana the "he" sound for example, is written exactly the same, just like how in English, the capital "O" and lower case "o" are written in the same way (only one is smaller in scale). And sometimes a pronunciation, or letter, is written differently. In hiragana and katakana the "su" sound for example is written completely different, just like how in English the capital "G" and lower case "g" are written differently. Kanji doesn't get placed as part of their alphabet because it's more of a short hand way of writing. See links for more.
The 5 are regular vowels, and with 21 consonants create the alphabet.
It doesn't. The Hieroglyphic alphabet has no vowels. (Websites that allow you to write your name in Hieroglyphics have a made-up vowel system. They usually use a variation of Y for the letter e.)
You can't accurately translate individual letters, because the Hebrew alphabet doesn't line up evenly with the English alphabet. (For example, the Hebrew alphabet doesn't have any vowels in it). Here's the closest you can get: p = פּ s = either שׂ or ס h = ה and there are no letters in Hebrew that represent vowels.
The question you asked does not completely make sense, as a word cannot be catagorised in one or the other. In the alphabet there are five vowels (a, e, i, o, u) and all the other letters are consonants. So in answer to your question, Anagram is made up of both vowels and consonants. Hope this helps
DNA could be compared to the alphabet in that different combinations of genes in DNA all together make up an entire person. Similarly, all the letters in the alphabet make up our entire language.
Well, consider that there are 26 letters in the alphabet. 5 of these are vowels (a, e, i, o and u). Therefore the probability is 5/26 - or 0.192307692. This assumes, of course, that you are randomly picking a letter from the alphabet... or rather, that each letter occurs in equal proportion within a larger text. This assumes the English alphabet. In other alphabets from other languages, there may be a different quantity of vowels and a different quantity of consonants (or possibly other letters all together). In writing, however, it is not the case that each letter appears in equal proportion. In a typical written document, for example, vowels make up about 38% of a text, on average. But it depends on a particular text, too, it may vary a little. Of course, it matters which language you draw a text from. Those languages which use the exact same alphabet as in English dont necessarily have the same distribution of vowels in text.
Mestizo is the largest Ethnic group of Nicaragua at 69 percent. Whites make up 17 percent, Blacks make up 9 percent and Amerindian make up 5 percent.
eight dimes make up what percent of a Dollar
so we could communicate talk and write
75%
The 5 vowels a,e,i,o and u as well as the 7 consonants h,k,l,m,n,p, and w make up the entire Hawaiian alphabet.
Chinese make up about _______ percent of Southeast Asia's population.