Yes - mostly compound words such as fishhead or fishhook.
I also find that words like hitchhiker and withhold falls into this category.
I've been told by my elemetary schoo teacher that fishhook was the only word in the English language that has a double h. But at that moment, the movie, Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy was coming out, and I corrected him.
Your elementary school teacher also forgot withheld, withhold etc.
No, the word "depth" does not have a double consonant. It contains the consonants "d", "p", "t", and "h".
No, hydra is a word. A consonant is a single letter, such as h, d, or r.
No, "hi" is not a double vowel word. It is composed of a consonant "h" and a single vowel "i."
Hobby, hubby, hugged, haggle, hottest and hatter are words. They contain a double consonant.
The silent letter in the word "ghastly" is the letter "h." In this word, the "gh" combination is pronounced as the "g" sound, so the "h" is silent. The "gh" digraph is a common spelling pattern in English where the "h" is silent and the preceding consonant is pronounced differently.
There is no such thing as "alphabet h". If you are asking what consonant comes next after the LETTER h, it's j.
The letter "h" is the third consonant in Beethoven's name.
No, "chief" is not a vowel-vowel-consonant (VVC) word. It consists of a consonant (c), followed by a vowel (h), a vowel (i), and then a consonant (f), making it a consonant-vowel-vowel-consonant (CVVC) word.
The word "Measles" is not a consonant. Consonants are letters such as b,c,d,f,g,h, Basically, any letter that isn't a vowel is a consonant. (The vowels are A-E-I-O-U- And sometimes y)
Yes, "light" is a CVVC (consonant-vowel-vowel-consonant) word. It consists of the consonant "l," followed by the vowel "i," then the consonant "g," and ends with the consonant "h," making it a valid example of the CVVC structure.
First of all a consonant is any letter that is out side of the set of letters (A,E,I,O,U).A double consonant refers to two (2) identical consonants, one after the other (or side by side), typically written as such to maintain the phonetic structure of a written word as it changes from one form to another. For example: run -> running. Sometimes the double consonant also preserves the meaning of the word along with its phonetic structure. Example: plan -> planning, if we did not use a double consonant, we would not be able to differentiate the the present participle of plan from that of plane.
In the word "harmony," the letter "h" does not stand for anything specific; it is simply a consonant that is part of the word's spelling. The word "harmony" itself refers to a pleasing arrangement of parts, whether in music, relationships, or other contexts.