A syllable is closed when a vowel is followed by a consonant. An easy way to remember it is that the vowel is "closed in" by the consonant.
CVC can stand for a variety of things, including California Vehicle Code, or consonant-vowel-consonant.
W is a consonant because it is not a vowel.
It is 21/26.
It is 21/26.
Radius
The word, circle has both a soft and a hard consonant. The first letter "c" is a soft consonant and the last letter , "c" is a hard consonant. That makes the first letter , "c" sound like the letter, "s", while the second letter, "c" sounds like the letter, "k".
consonant vowel consonant............:)
It's VCCV. (vowel consonant consonant vowel)
give me a sample of what is a consence
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
Nope its a consonant.
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
* consonant - vowel - consonant (C V C ) examples: bat, dig, bus * consonant - vowel - consonant - consonant (C V C C) ex. back, ring, bust * consonant - consonant - vowel - consonant (C C V C), shot, prim, trap * vowel - consonant - vowel - consonant (V C V C) open, opal, emit * consonant, vowel, vowel, consonant (C V V C) pool, seed, hook * consonant, vowel, consonant, consonant, vowel (C V C C V) paste, maple, dance
A consonant placed between two vowels is an intervocalic consonant.