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.
Mississippi
committee
bookkeeper
cauliflower
"Millimeter" is an English word that has a double 'i' in it.
"Y" (sounds like a long e in English like in the word "Need") by itself as a word in Spanish means "and" in English.
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.
The word "llama" has two L's because it is derived from the Quechua language, where the double L represents a unique sound that does not exist in English. The double L is pronounced as a "y" sound in English, which is why llama is pronounced "yah-mah."
No, not English words.
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
Bookkeeper. Although Subbookkeeper has four.
In the word "anything," the letter Y is acting as a vowel because it is making the sound of a long E, which is a vowel sound. In general, in English, the letter Y is considered a vowel when it functions as a vowel sound in a word.
It depends on how this question is read.If it is asking how to pronounce the French word "y", meaning "there" (like "nous y allons"), it is pronounced like "ee" in the English word "bee".If it is using "y" as "text-speak" to represent the English word "why", the French word for this is "pourqoui". In French "text-speak", "pk" or "pq" is usually used to represent "pourqoui".
The following words have three consecutive sets of double letters:bookkeeperbookkeepersbookkeeping