xyl
"Hylo " also appears to be the answer.
The article "an" is used before words beginning with a vowel sound.
"An" is only used before vowel's, "a" is used before consonant's. So, no. "A holiday."
"An" is used before a word that starts with a vowel sound.
No, "H" is not a vowel, and so the unvoiced vowel "ə" is used in "the", similar to the sound of "thu Holy Spirit".
An is article used before words that start with vowel.
"An" is used before a word that begins with a vowel while "A" is used before a word that begins with a consonant.
The prefixes 'a' and 'an' mean without, as inasymmetricaland anarchy. 'A' is used before a consonant and 'an' is used before a vowel.
The correct form is "a used". The article "an" is used before vowel sounds, and even though "used" begins with a vowel, it does not begin with a vowel sound, because "used" sounds like "yoozed". So you would say "a used car", but "anoozing sore".
"An" is an indefinite article used in place of the word "a" before words beginning with a vowel. The word "an" is used the same as the word "a." "An" is used when the following word starts with a vowel or a vowel sound such as the word "hour."
"An astronaut" is the correct form, not "a astronaut." "an" is used instead of "a" whenever the word it modifies begins with a vowel.
No.When used before a vowel sound, "the" has a long E sound.(The animal is wild.)When used before a consonant, "the" has a schwa or unstressed sound (thuh).(The wild animal is loose)
In both of those words Y is considered a vowel. It is a consonant when it is used before a vowel at the beginning of a words or when it separates two vowels.