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2006-12-11 23:25:25 · 10 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Languages

10 answers

Summary -- all the answers containing the letter Y are mistaken, because Y acts as a vowel in those words.

My suggestion: TSKTSKS

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Here's the explanation

FIRST, what IS a vowel?

bostonianinmo is correct - in words like "sky" the "y" IS a vowel. The very fact that "bi-" and "by" rhyme, or that you sometimes find "rimed" instead of "rhymed" is evidence of this.

The idea that ONLY a,e,i,o and u (or even "sometimes y") are vowels in based on oversimplified definition they gave us in grade school. In fact, a vowel is, before all else, a type of SOUND rather than a type of LETTER. We call specific letters "vowels" because these letters are the ones TYPICALLY used to indicate the vowel sounds.
(compare http://alt-usage-english.org/excerpts/fxword00.html)

Remember that SPEECH has the primacy and that a word is, first of all a SPOKEN thing. Writing systems were created as a means to make a record of speech.

Note that the three sounds indicated by the letters "h" "w" and "y" are all weak "semi-vowels" which can easily become vowels or even disappear (as "h" at the end of a syllable). The basic rule is that, whenever "y" or "w" BEGIN a syllable they mark consonants; at the middle of end of a syllable they mark VOWELS. (In the case of "w", except for words from the Welsh, like "cwm" [pronounced "coom"!] w is only used for vowels in diphthongs, e.g., "How now brown cow?" It's even easier to see that they are functioning vowels if you note that final "oy" is pronounced exactly like the "oi" in the middle of a word, and "ow" is pronounced like "ou".)

(Of course, one of my favorite words in all this is "why", made up ONLY of semi-vowels.)

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There ARE words without vowel SOUNDS (and in which none of the letters indicates a vowel). They are various "interjections", such as the following:

brr(r)
grr(r)
tsk
shh(h)
psst
hmm
mm-hmm

This last one might be the longest all by itself. (It is true we might add extra letters to many such words, e.g., h's to "shh" or r's to "brr". But that would be cheating. And where would you stop?!)

I think the longest bona fide word of this sort is "tsktsks" used as a verb, the equivalent of "utters a tsktsk" or "expresses disapproval", e.g., "he tsktsks her suggestions".

for word trivia involving vowels, see:
http://members.aol.com/gulfhigh2/words6.html

(note this is part of a 19-page series on word trivia!)


ANOTHER ANSWER !

For an entertaining list of many consonant-only words (mostly made up) which have actually appeared in literature check out
The Dictionary of Consonant-Only Words by Craig Conly -http://www.oneletterwords.com/consonant/index.html.
(He lists 105 words under "T" alone! )

2006-12-12 08:38:41 · answer #1 · answered by bruhaha 7 · 0 0

Longest English Word

2016-09-30 14:23:16 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

This Site Might Help You.

RE:
Which is longest English word without a Vowel?

2015-08-07 07:34:40 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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."


“Rhythm” and “syzygy” are the longest words in English written without vowels. Rhythm: beat, pace, tempo implies a movement or procedure with measured beat or recurrence of beat etc. It applies in different ways to physiology, music, art, literature and music.
Syzygy: the alignment of three celestial bodies, example earth, moon and the sun or also any two objects similar or opposite related to one another

Strengths is the longest English word with just one vowel.
With a vowel, the longest word in English is pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanokoniosis, a pnemonoconiosis caused by quartz or dust when inhaled as fine particles.

Floccinaucinihilipilification is the second longest English word implying the art of determining things as worthless.

2006-12-11 23:28:03 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

Twyndyllyngs

2006-12-11 23:27:57 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Rhythm

2006-12-11 23:35:03 · answer #6 · answered by Myrtle 3 · 0 1

they all have a vowel as far as I know

2006-12-11 23:27:05 · answer #7 · answered by setter505 5 · 0 0

Isn't the letter -y- a vowel?

2006-12-11 23:39:07 · answer #8 · answered by Nicole 3 · 0 0

Twyndyllyngs
?

2006-12-11 23:27:05 · answer #9 · answered by DeeDee 5 · 1 1

Twyndyllyngs

easy enough if you can google :D

http://www.rinkworks.com/words/oddities.shtml

2006-12-11 23:39:49 · answer #10 · answered by bluegreenash 2 · 0 1

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