This is known as a consonant-vowel-consonant (CVC) pattern in phonics. It is a common spelling and pronunciation pattern in English words, such as "cat" or "dog."
When "y" follows a vowel, it often functions as a consonant, such as in the words "cry" and "myth." "Y" typically represents a consonant sound in this position, even though it is often considered a vowel.
Yes, "sew" has a long vowel sound because it follows the vowel-consonant-e pattern where the final "e" makes the preceding vowel say its name.
The state that only has one vowel is Ohio.
I don't understand. The state of being verbs are as follows: have, has, had, shall, can and may.
Since "dock" only has one vowel, the vowel is "o" and it is a short vowel.
Sh (2 consonants) u (1 vowel) ttl (3 consonants) e (1 vowel)Note:Consonants: bcdfghjklmnpqrstvwxyzVowels: aeiou
the shape of the lips the gap between the tongue and the roof
Its a consanant in any word whatsoever
there is no restriction. Should I .... should he .....
A consonant is a letter in the alphabet other than a vowelA vowel is English is a, e, i, o, u (and sometimes w and y)
There is another consonant-vowel-consonant syllable that follows the first one.
You should use a before a word starting with a consanant (not a,e,i,o,u), and use an before a word starting with a vowel(a,e,i,o,u).
"Shiver" follows the v cv pattern. It has one vowel followed by one consonant and ends with a vowel.
Well i know one called eunoia
When "y" follows a vowel, it often functions as a consonant, such as in the words "cry" and "myth." "Y" typically represents a consonant sound in this position, even though it is often considered a vowel.
It is a consonant because there are already e's in the word. Therefore, y would be a consanant. Y is a vowel in everybody. It doesn't matter how many ee's are in the word it depends on how the word is pronounced. (ĕvˈrē-bŏdˌē)
February