H.
the rest are vowels.
a
If you mean the three same letters in a row, well, current English does not allow words like bulllike or frillless and prefers to hyphenate them: bull-like, frill-less. But other languages can allow these formations. In German, there is Schifffahrt (water transportation) and in Estonian there is 'jaaaar' (actually with tremas on the a's), which means edge of the ice.
The last three letters of the following states can be used to form a three letter word:Alaska - askConnecticut - cutDelaware - areKansas - assMaryland - andMichigan - nagNebraska - askNew Hampshire - ireNew Jersey - yesRhode Island - andTennessee - seeUtah - hatVermont - not - tonWashington - not - tonWisconsin - sinWyoming - gin
they are Pokemon shaped like letters
On the keyboard
Looks like an acronym to me. TAM is an airline in South America, but the same three letters probably stand for several other things, too.Looks like an acronym to me. TAM is an airline in South America, but the same three letters probably stand for several other things, too.Looks like an acronym to me. TAM is an airline in South America, but the same three letters probably stand for several other things, too.Looks like an acronym to me. TAM is an airline in South America, but the same three letters probably stand for several other things, too.
The letter 'Y' is least like the other four, because it is the only vowel of the group.
Well the designs weren't provided for this answer. But I found and an example the answer choices were N, A, V, H, and F. The answer would be "V" because it only has two parts while all the other letters have three.
Strawberry
strawberry :P
strawberry
peach
The circle.
a
z , q, x, y, and sometimes k are like, the least used letters.
Words like USA or CPU are two examples.
appaloosa