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2006-12-09 09:00:04 · 24 answers · asked by MrZ. NiiCk JoNaS!i!i! 2 in Education & Reference Words & Wordplay

24 answers

The answer: more often than not, it IS a vowel!

It's the fact, that it is not ALWAYS a vowel that has confused people.

Actually, the reason many folks SAY that only a, e, i, o and u are vowels and the rest are consonants is probably mainly because they are repeating some rule-of-thumb they learned in grade school but never really understood. (Those whose rule added "and sometimes y" or even "and sometimes y and w" are rather better off, though they still may not know when or why that "sometimes" happens.)

Part of the problem is that people do not understand what "consonant" and "vowel" MEAN, esp. that they are FIRST-of-all descriptions of types of SOUNDS, and only secondarily of which LETTERS we use to indicate those sounds.

So, looking at the sounds first:

1) "CONSONANTS" are sounds made by severly restricting or stopping the flow of air. Note that is not JUST those that stop the flow -- these sounds (like b,p, t,d, k,g), fittingly called "STOPS" [another useful term] are only ONE type of consonant. A great many consonants do not stop the flow, but they DO restrict it.

A way to remember this 'CONSonants CONStrict the air flow'.
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/consonant
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consonant

2) "VOWELS" on the other hand, are characterized by how they SHAPE the sound --esp by positioning of the tongue and shape of the mouth-- without severly constricting the air flow. This is why they are so important to carrying speech and enabling us to open up our mouths and sing. Note that vowels almost always are "voiced" (sounded with the vocal chords); in many (most?) languages (English included) ALL vowels are voiced. A great many consonants --including those that don't stop the air flow-- are not voiced. This characteristic use of the voice (compare "vocal") is the origin of the term "vowel" itself.
http://www.webster.com/dictionary/vowel
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vowel

--------------------------------

So much for vowel and consonant SOUNDS. The other source of confusion has to do with LETTERS.

Notice that the letters are one step removed from speech. For the most part our "consonant"-letters match up with consonant-SOUNDS and "vowel"-letters with vowel-sounds. What causes confusion is:

1) Spoken language and written language don't always change together... so that a letter may be written that no longer matches the sound made. For example, silent letters (mostly consonants) -- lamb, knight, soften.

Most people understand this, so the real issue is. . .
2) There is a set of sounds called "semi-vowels" on the "borderline" between consonants and vowels. Based on how they combine with surrounding sounds they may become one or the other. This accounts for the letter "y" being for a consonant-sound in "yell" but for a vowel-sound in "shy" --and actually, the "y" originally marked a VOWEL sound, and still is used in English for vowel sounds much MORE often than for consonants. Similar is the letter "w" which at the beginning of a syllable marks a consonant-sound ("well"), but latter in a syllable marks a vowel. (In modern English this only happens in the vowel-combinations ['dipthongs'] "aw", "ew", "ow", though in words from Welsh it can stand alone [like cwm, pronounced "coom"])

SUMMARY:
A more complete, if less catchy, statement of the rule would be something like this --
"In English, except when a letter is silent:
a) a, e, i, o and u are used as vowels [that is, to indicate vowel sounds];
b) y and w are consonants [=indicate consonant sounds] when they are used at the BEGINNING of a word or syllable, elsewhere they are vowels [=indicate vowel sounds];
c) all the other letters are consonants."

2006-12-09 10:16:16 · answer #1 · answered by bruhaha 7 · 0 0

Sometimes, when it has the sound of an I. Not sure if it is technically a real vowel, but when I was in first grade we sang this song in class about vowels that went " A E I O U and sometimes Y."

2006-12-09 09:02:45 · answer #2 · answered by h0lland8 2 · 0 0

The letter Y stands for a consonant in "yoke" but for a vowel in "myth." The answer to the question is that Y is the only letter commonly used as both vowel and consonant in English.

2006-12-09 09:16:08 · answer #3 · answered by Gregnir 6 · 0 0

Y is a vowel when there are no other vowels in the workd like the word BY.

2006-12-09 10:51:52 · answer #4 · answered by andreaaa :) 5 · 0 0

Sometimes, in words without vowels. Like, "my"

2006-12-09 09:31:09 · answer #5 · answered by zoralink3 3 · 0 0

I've read that it is always a vowel in English except here in the U.S., where it can be considered either. In a numerology book, which falls in the same category as astrology and palm reading, the letter "y" is always a vowel.

2006-12-09 09:17:45 · answer #6 · answered by rebekkah hot as the sun 7 · 0 1

Technically it's not...'coz there are only 5 vowels...(a e i o u) but the letter y can be used as one but it can't be classified as a vowel...

2006-12-09 10:43:57 · answer #7 · answered by JK 2 · 0 0

It is called the "sometimes vowel."

2006-12-09 11:10:19 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

when y makes the e sound without using any other vowel it is considered one. like in the word gladly and such.

2006-12-09 09:02:36 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

sometimes....when it is the only letter between consonants and makes a vowel sound..like symbol and chrysalis

2006-12-09 09:12:51 · answer #10 · answered by Steph 2 · 0 0

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