It is where no other vowel fits, for example
my, why, hymn, lymph etc
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It is where no other vowel fits, for example
my, why, hymn, lymph etc |
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Good question!! not sure if Clown Tickle has answered it by giving a few examples how Y is used, why don't we just include it as a vowel??
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Some grammarians do claim it to be a vowel. It's been a subject of discord amongst them for centuries.
The best answer is that it's both, as described here |
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'vowels' and 'consonants' really describe sounds, not letters. The letter Y can perform both of these functions - vowel sound (ie no obstruction to the flow of breath) in the words clown tickle mentions; but a consonant sound in yes, year and so on. W can be a vowel in Welsh.
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Precisely. Strictly speaking it's a semi-vocalic.
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Come to think of it, why do we separate letters out into vowels and consonants anyway ?
Does splitting them up serve any purpose ? |
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mi, whi, himn, limph....sounds fine to me...
it can nearly always be substituted for an I but not when it is a consonant form in yes, yellow etc |
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it is a vowel in Welsh :-) as is W
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"Does splitting them up serve any purpose ?"
Um... it pads out "Countdown" a bit. |
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