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In the case of "Lynne" or "Sky" or similar names, the 'y' is used as a vowel and not a consonant. The difference is an "eye" or "ih" sound rather than "yuh," as in "yes." Of course this is a matter of opinion. This means that the only English-used names without a vowel in it are abbreviations, like CJ, JJ, MJ, DW, KD or whatever other letter combinations you can think of, and even then you must say them with a vowel sound. :)

2006-12-02 07:35:02 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Sky

2006-12-02 07:21:32 · answer #2 · answered by Berdie 3 · 0 1

Lynn
Y is only sorta a vowel!

2006-12-02 07:18:55 · answer #3 · answered by dreamer 3 · 1 2

Cym

2006-12-02 07:19:28 · answer #4 · answered by Crazy Diamond 6 · 0 2

dw from arthur

2006-12-02 08:23:08 · answer #5 · answered by ze_blue_mage 3 · 0 1

bcdfghijklmnpqrstvwxz. taadaa!

2006-12-02 07:19:21 · answer #6 · answered by smexxiiiladiiiee47 2 · 0 2

shshshshsh!

2006-12-02 07:14:47 · answer #7 · answered by Steve H 4 · 0 2

BJ

2006-12-02 07:19:19 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

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