Some words with double consonants are rattle, tattle, cattle, battle, mitten, kitten (the tt in the middle of the word is an example of double consonants)Other words with double consonants are rubble, dabble, ribbed, dabbing (the bb in the middle of the word is an example of double consonants.
A word is not a double consonant, a word can have a double consonant.discussion, middle, pollution - have double consonants.
attentionbattlegroundcobblestonediscussionemissionpossession
Double consonant words include baseball, cabbage, dotted, letter, occupied, soccer, spelling, and success (which has 2 sets).
These are the only words, (excluding plural forms), beginning in double consonants I could find, searching both Webster's Second International and the Scrabble dictionary: llama llano llautu llyn mm ssu zzz Not sure if "ssu" is supposed to be a word, or an abbreviation.
No. All the consonants in submit are single consonants s,b,m,t
Some words with double consonants are rattle, tattle, cattle, battle, mitten, kitten (the tt in the middle of the word is an example of double consonants)Other words with double consonants are rubble, dabble, ribbed, dabbing (the bb in the middle of the word is an example of double consonants.
No, "divide" does not contain double consonants. The word "divide" has two consonants, "d" and "v." Double consonants are two consecutive instances of the same consonant in a word, such as in "butter" or "apple."
consonants with BB
A double constant is a word with two of the same consonants together. Some examples are:abbotbetterclappingdessertessayfunnygullyhoppinginnjellykisslotterymessynappingotterprettyquillruthlessskippingtallestuddervillainwhammyyellowzippy
Some common double consonants in English are: ll, pp, ss, tt, mm, gg, zz, ff, dd. These double consonants are often found in words with suffixes, such as "happened" or "running."
Collect has double l's
No, a word with two consonants does not necessarily have two syllables too.Some examples of double consonants in two syllable words are:HappyDinnerSummerBubbleSillyAppleCoffee.
No, "accommodate" does not have double consonants that represent two separate units of sound. The double consonants in "accommodate" (the two C's and two M's) are used to indicate the preceding vowel as short.
alot
diner dinner
Yes, "collect" is a word with double consonants ("ll").