WORDS WITHOUT VOWELS
AY
BY
CRY
DRY
FLY
FRY
FYRD
GYPSY
GYVE
HYMN
HYP
LYMPH
LYNCH
LYNX
MYTH
MY
PLY
PYGMY
PYX
RHYTHM
SHY
SHYLY
SKY
SPRY
SPY
STY
STYX
SYLPH
SYZYGY
THYMY
TRY
TRYST
WRY
WYND
I THINK ONLY 34 WORDS IN WHOLE DICTIONARY WORDS WITHOUT VOWELS,IF YOU THINK OR MORE WORDS ,CMMWNTS ME,ONE THING YOU WILL NOTE THAT ALL 34 WORDS HAVE Y,WHY,IS IT SEMI VOWELS?,IF IT IS TRUE,TO FIND OUT THIS INTERESTING KNOWLEDGE,SO THE CREDIT SHOULD GO TO ME.
WITH LOVE
PIYUSHDADRIWALA
www.piyush-g.741.com
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gyve has a vowel
If there is then you have not been as active and involved in your child’s life and decisions as you should’ve or could’ve been. is manifest as temper tantrums, active defiance of rules, dawdling, argumentativeness, stubbornness, or being easily annoyed (p. Overprotective or authoritarian parents put children at risk for problematic behavior later in life.
y is a vowel rember a e i o u sometimaes y. Im smarter than a scintist!!!!!!!!
The Y in each of those words is a vowel -_-
Actually it so happens that it aeiou and sometimes Y
sh psst all those interjections are words to look it up………………………………..serp
Use full information.
you guys are so seirous
My god!
You people need lives!
These are really good and useful!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11
Rubbish so they are gyve and AY have vowels ??
thanks…………………………
ASK
Sly
how about GYM…..WHY…?????
:)
What about sphynx ? AEIOU lol
How about sphynx ? AEIOU lol.
A u don’t u kno your vowels thet are A E I O U n sometime y
Dude.. You have multiple words with vowels up there. Last time I checked E and A are vowels.
GYVE has a vowel
Hi all
The longest word is TWYNDYLLYNGS
Twyndyllyngs is the longest word in English that doesn’t contain one of the five vowels (AEIOU). It comes from Welsh and is obviously rare, but it does appear in the Oxford English Dictionary.
It turns out that “twyndyllyng” (singular) is a 15th century spelling of the word “twinling,” which means, in modern English, “twin.”