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.
Since "dock" only has one vowel, the vowel is "o" and it is a short vowel.
Virus is not a vowel. It is a two-syllable word having one "long" vowel and one schwa 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.
"Shiver" follows the v cv pattern. It has one vowel followed by one consonant and ends with a vowel.
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).
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