A word with a double Y: sayyid.
If you count Y as a vowel, there is none. so if you really need a word dont count y as a vowel
Impossible!That is just impossible. Actually, every single word in the whole entire English language has a vowel in it. So it is impossible to say a word in the English language with no vowels. Only some abbreviations don't have vowels, but they are not words so they don't count.Now take the word F-L-Y for example. There is no A in it. There is no E in it. There is no I in it. There is no O in it. And there is no U in it. But there is a Y. And a Y is sometimes considered a vowel because in the word, the Y makes the sound of a long I. In other words the Y may sound like a E, like in the word key.
committee
bookkeeper
Mississippi
cauliflower
The word Spanish word "pollo" means "chicken" in English. The Spanish word "y" means "and" in English. The phrase "pollo y arrow" means chicken and arrow in English.
"Y" (sounds like a long e in English like in the word "Need") by itself as a word in Spanish means "and" in English.
No, not English words.
The vowels in the English language are A, E, I, O, U, and sometimes Y. In the word anything, the Y is a vowel.
Idyllic
It depends, if you mean "y" as in the word "and", it is pronounced like a "long e" in English (like yippee, or she, or me). If you mean "y" as in how to say "the letter y", then it is pronounced "ee- (like she or me) gr-ee-egg-ah"If it's part of a longer word than 'y' ('and'), it's not dissimilar to English 'y' in 'you',e.g. hay (as English 'I') = there is/are;hoy (like Oy! in English) = todayayer (ahYAIR) = yesterday
The word "bookkeeper" is a word in the English dictionary that has 3 double letters in succession.
double
It is as in a 'vacuum'
If you count Y as a vowel, there is none. so if you really need a word dont count y as a vowel
Technically no, however in the English Language, y has the capabilities of fulfilling the necessity to have a vowel. (there are no English words without a vowel or a y)