Math, asked by shakti2006, 1 year ago

Please answer me friends. Words having no vowels in it.

Answers

Answered by Missintelligent1
3
by, lynx, my, dry, fly, fry, cry, pry, gym, shy, sky, sly, spy, try, sty, why, wry, hymn, cyst, myrrh, myth, wyrm, crypt, flyby, glyph, gypsy, lynch, nymph, pygmy

Missintelligent1: thanks
zehn: u r reallly miss intelligent
Missintelligent1: i know
shakti2006: right
zehn: vese tum ek ques bataogi
Missintelligent1: ok
zehn: u use fb
Missintelligent1: no
zehn: ok my ques. is
zehn: if two plus two divided by two then wht is the answer
Answered by thegenaration
2
in English, the letter Y can represent either a vowel or a consonant sound,[1] and many Modern English words spell the /ɪ/ and /aɪ/sounds with Y; these include by, lynx, my, dry, fly, fry, cry, pry, gym, shy, sky, sly, spy, try, sty, why, wry, hymn, cyst, myrrh, myth, wyrm, crypt,flyby, glyph, gypsy, lynch, nymph, pygmy, rhythm,[2] tryst and syzygy which are vowels in these cases.[3] The longest dictionary words (base forms excluding plurals) with Y the only vowel are rhythm, spryly, sylphy, Sphynx andsyzygy.[4] The longest such word in common use is rhythms,[5][6] and the longest such word in Modern English is the obsolete 17th-century word symphysy. If archaic words and spellings are considered, there are many more, the longest perhaps being twyndyllyngs,the plural of twyndyllyng meaning "twin".[7]There are also many other word.

Middle English used W to represent either a vowel or a consonant sound in the same way that Modern English uses Y, particularly during the 14th and 15th centuries. Vocalic W generally represented /uː/,[1][8] as in wss"use".[9] This practice exists in modern Welsh orthography, and there are a couple of words borrowed from Welsh that use W in this way:

The crwth[10] (pronounced /ˈkrʊθ/ or /ˈkruːθ/and also spelled cruth) is a Welsh musical instrument similar to the violin:[11]He intricately rhymes, to the music of crwth and pibgorn.[12]cwtch (a hiding place or cubby hole) is also from Welsh (albeit a recent word influenced by English), and crwth and cwtch are according to Collins the longest English dictionary words without A, E, I, O, U, or Y.[4]A cwm[13] (pronounced /ˈkuːm/) is a deep hollow within a mountain, usually with steep edges, like a corrie, such as the Western Cwm of Mount Everest.


thegenaration: yeh why not
shakti2006: Thanks
shakti2006: I will surely help you
thegenaration: ok
shakti2006: In which class do you read
thegenaration: 9 clasd
shakti2006: I am your junior
thegenaration: ok dear
shakti2006: 7class
thegenaration: nice my small bro also in 7 class
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