Sequoia π
Funny: Home of the Haha
Welcome to /c/funny, a place for all your humorous and amusing content.
Looking for mods! Send an application to Stamets!
Our Rules:
-
Keep it civil. We're all people here. Be respectful to one another.
-
No sexism, racism, homophobia, transphobia or any other flavor of bigotry. I should not need to explain this one.
-
Try not to repost anything posted within the past month. Beyond that, go for it. Not everyone is on every site all the time.
Other Communities:
-
/c/TenForward@lemmy.world - Star Trek chat, memes and shitposts
-
/c/Memes@lemmy.world - General memes
Well done
Education (Β΄ο½₯α΄ο½₯ ` )
I don't get it?
It has one of every vowel.
Ah I see.
I hear this photo
Tsk is an onomatopoeia for disapproval
Hmm, pst, grr, mmm, all acceptable words in Scrabble https://scrabble.merriam.com/words-without-vowels
Scrabble's acceptable words include non-English words and other BS. It's about as far from a viable "word list" as you can get.
it's just a bunch of approved letter sequences.
hell, there was Kiwi guy who won French Scrabble. Doesn't speak or know any French, just memorised the book.
The guy who won the French Scrabble World Championships as a non-french speaker was not an American. His name is Nigel Richards and he's a New Zealander who now calls Malaysia his home.
Entirely true that the Scrabble word list is just like a collection of valid trading cards, Nigel Richards just collected them all.
Try, cry, pry, wry... <- Except that in these instances, Y is the vowel. Unless you're playing Wheel of Fortune, where Ys are always counted as consonants and cost nothing to play.
Hmm, not sure if there are.
Rhythm technically
Rhythm's not a vowelless word.
Rhythm is a dancer.
Welp, now that's gonna be stuck in my head for at least a few days! At least it's a great song.
In rhythm, y functions as a vowel, as it makes a vowel sound.
Spelling-wise? Depends on what you mean by "vowel" and "word" β vowel isn't really a term for letters/spelling, it only really makes sense in a phonemic/phonetic context. So, phonetically? Yes β i.e. words that only have a rhotic in the nucleus like "curd" which is just [kΙΉΜ©d] in many rhotic dialects like most American English, "and" is often pronounced [nΜ©], "can" can be [knΜ©]~[kΕΜ], "full" can be pronounced [fΚΜ©] in some dialects (includinΙ‘ mine). You can also include paralinguistic words like "shh" [ΚΜ©].
I also don't get why you're being downvoted so much. Great answer.
Those arenβt really English βwordsβ though. Thereβs some old welsh in there which actually used W as a double U. And then some onomatopoeia, which while defined in some dictionaries, arenβt really words anymore than abbreviations like CIA or FCC are words.
According to the Cambridge English dictionary a word is simply "a single unit of language that has meaning and can be spoken or written", so acronyms and onomatopoeia are words as much as any other apparently. Maybe they would consider an acronym multiple units of language bound together though so not itself a word.
A cwm (pronounced /ΛkuΛm/) is used in English in a technical geographical or mountaineering context to mean a deep hollow in a mountainous area
Uhuh...
I'm about to cwm.
Pppffffttttt
Fun fact: In Dutch 'vowels' is the same word as is used for 'streetstones' (klinkers), so if you ask this question in Dutch, the answer is 'dirtroad'. π
Ply?
But only if you reject the "sometimes y" clause.
rhythm.
I think there might be a sometimes w clause too. But any w words I can think of have a y anyway
W is a sometimes vowel in Welsh. There are a few Welsh words that are valid in Scrabble dictionaries, which is really the only metric that matters. There are also several onomatopoeias that are valid Scrabble words, like mmm or brr or tsktsks. That last one is the only 7 letter word with no vowels or sometimes vowels.
Maaan, everything is a vowel if you just Welsh it hard enough.
What?
Myst
Y functions as a vowel in this instance
You can't just identify as a vowel.
Ok boomer
Kyrgyz... styrn.
Tch!
Hsptl?
ΠΡΡΡ
I honestly dont know how people come up with these answers
"What's 'vowels', precious?"
HNNNNNGH!