no "escuse" starts with the letter "E" which is considered a vowel (a, e, i, o, u) consonants are every other letter.
Mississippi There are probably thousands of words that start that way.
The double consonant in the word "start" is the letter "t."
The article "an" is used in front of a consonant when the consonant is pronounced with a vowel sound. This typically occurs with words that start with a silent "h" or a vowel-sounding "h" like "hour" or "honor."
consonant vowel consonant............:)
give me a sample of what is a consence
It's VCCV. (vowel consonant consonant vowel)
The correct sentence is: "You will be a responsible person." The article "a" is used before words that start with a consonant sound, while "an" is used before words that start with a vowel sound. In this case, "responsible" starts with a consonant sound.
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).
archetchinch
Eight out of Canada's ten provinces begin with a consonant, which represents 80% of the total. The only two provinces that start with a vowel are Ontario and Alberta.
There are no common English words with 6 consonants and no vowels. However, the compound words archchronicler, catchphrase, and latchstring all have 6 consonants in a row.
no. "s" is a consonant so "clothes" starts with a consonant and ends with a consonant