Sh (2 consonants) u (1 vowel) ttl (3 consonants) e (1 vowel)
Note:
Consonants: bcdfghjklmnpqrstvwxyz
Vowels: 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)
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."
Yes, "shuttle" is a VCCV (vowel-consonant-consonant-vowel) word because it has the pattern of a vowel followed by a consonant, then two consonants, and ending 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).
The word "shuttle" is broken down into VCCV (consonant-consonant-vowel-consonant-vowel) pattern. The two consonants "sh" are separated by the double "t" in the middle.
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)
"Shuttle" is classified as a VCCV word because it consists of two syllables, where the first syllable contains a vowel (u) followed by two consonants (tt), and the second syllable also contains a vowel (e) followed by a consonant (l). The structure fits the VCCV pattern, where "V" stands for a vowel and "C" stands for a consonant. This classification helps in understanding syllable division and pronunciation in phonics.
A and an are practically the same things except a is in front of nouns starting with *a consanant. An is used in front of vowels and for 2 exceptions back then(y and h). *That is an example ( a consanant ) ( an example is an example of an)
Do you mean Continent? If so it is part of North America!