andy_g wrote:Kenny Kan wrote:One word, three letters, two vowels and one consonant...
YES
can't believe you've announced yourself to the forum with a basic grammatical error.

andy_g wrote:Kenny Kan wrote:One word, three letters, two vowels and one consonant...
YES
can't believe you've announced yourself to the forum with a basic grammatical error.
Benny The Noon wrote:What's with the ten games stuff ? Seen you mention it a few times now . He is here for rest of season - not ten games .
Ben Patrick wrote:lakes10 wrote:i have voted yes.....for now, with this team i would like the chance to vote again in ten games time.
i feel i need to make my point again, the team needs a lot of work, new players. if that dont happen i fear there will be calls for kenny to go.
if the results are right then he should be given a two year contract ofther the next ten games.
its just a tinsy winsy bit contradictory your post.
The team needs a lot of work you say, Kenny has been given the rest of the season to do that, but you feel he should be reassessed in 10 games despite how much work is required.
Why ?
andy_g wrote:dawson99 wrote:The letter Y can be regarded as both a vowel and a consonant. In terms of sound, a vowel is 'a speech sound which is produced by comparatively open configuration of the vocal tract, with vibration of the vocal cords but without audible friction...', while a consonant is 'a basic speech sound in which the breath is at least partly obstructed'. The letter Y can be used to represent different sounds in different words, and can therefore fit either definition. In myth or hymn it's clearly a vowel, and also in words such as my, where it stands for a diphthong (a combination of two vowel sounds). On the other hand, in a word like beyond there is an obstacle to the breath which can be heard between two vowels, and the same sound begins words like young and yes. (This consonant sound, like that of the letter W, is sometimes called a 'semivowel' because it is made in a similar way to a vowel, but functions in contrast to vowels when used in words.) Whether the letter Y is a vowel or a consonant is therefore rather an arbitrary decision. The letter is probably more often used as a vowel, but in this role it's often interchangeable with the letter I. However, the consonant sound is not consistently represented in English spelling by any other letter, and perhaps for this reason Y tends traditionally to be counted among the consonants.
fukk
Kenny Kan wrote:andy_g wrote:Kenny Kan wrote:One word, three letters, two vowels and one consonant...
YES
can't believe you've announced yourself to the forum with a basic grammatical error.
Kenny Kan wrote:andy_g wrote:Kenny Kan wrote:One word, three letters, two vowels and one consonant...
YES
can't believe you've announced yourself to the forum with a basic grammatical error.
Ben Patrick wrote:Kenny Kan wrote:andy_g wrote:Kenny Kan wrote:One word, three letters, two vowels and one consonant...
YES
can't believe you've announced yourself to the forum with a basic grammatical error.
Well where is vowel number two ?
lakes10 wrote:Ben Patrick wrote:lakes10 wrote:i have voted yes.....for now, with this team i would like the chance to vote again in ten games time.
i feel i need to make my point again, the team needs a lot of work, new players. if that dont happen i fear there will be calls for kenny to go.
if the results are right then he should be given a two year contract ofther the next ten games.
its just a tinsy winsy bit contradictory your post.
The team needs a lot of work you say, Kenny has been given the rest of the season to do that, but you feel he should be reassessed in 10 games despite how much work is required.
Why ?
no as the results should be better by the end of the ten games.
Ben Patrick wrote:Kenny Kan wrote:andy_g wrote:Kenny Kan wrote:One word, three letters, two vowels and one consonant...
YES
can't believe you've announced yourself to the forum with a basic grammatical error.
Well where is vowel number two ?
andy_g wrote:i'm really not having this Y is a vowel bullshít
dawson99 wrote:The letter Y can be regarded as both a vowel and a consonant. In terms of sound, a vowel is 'a speech sound which is produced by comparatively open configuration of the vocal tract, with vibration of the vocal cords but without audible friction...', while a consonant is 'a basic speech sound in which the breath is at least partly obstructed'. The letter Y can be used to represent different sounds in different words, and can therefore fit either definition. In myth or hymn it's clearly a vowel, and also in words such as my, where it stands for a diphthong (a combination of two vowel sounds). On the other hand, in a word like beyond there is an obstacle to the breath which can be heard between two vowels, and the same sound begins words like young and yes. (This consonant sound, like that of the letter W, is sometimes called a 'semivowel' because it is made in a similar way to a vowel, but functions in contrast to vowels when used in words.) Whether the letter Y is a vowel or a consonant is therefore rather an arbitrary decision. The letter is probably more often used as a vowel, but in this role it's often interchangeable with the letter I. However, the consonant sound is not consistently represented in English spelling by any other letter, and perhaps for this reason Y tends traditionally to be counted among the consonants.
dawson99 wrote:dawson99 wrote:The letter Y can be regarded as both a vowel and a consonant. In terms of sound, a vowel is 'a speech sound which is produced by comparatively open configuration of the vocal tract, with vibration of the vocal cords but without audible friction...', while a consonant is 'a basic speech sound in which the breath is at least partly obstructed'. The letter Y can be used to represent different sounds in different words, and can therefore fit either definition. In myth or hymn it's clearly a vowel, and also in words such as my, where it stands for a diphthong (a combination of two vowel sounds). On the other hand, in a word like beyond there is an obstacle to the breath which can be heard between two vowels, and the same sound begins words like young and yes. (This consonant sound, like that of the letter W, is sometimes called a 'semivowel' because it is made in a similar way to a vowel, but functions in contrast to vowels when used in words.) Whether the letter Y is a vowel or a consonant is therefore rather an arbitrary decision. The letter is probably more often used as a vowel, but in this role it's often interchangeable with the letter I. However, the consonant sound is not consistently represented in English spelling by any other letter, and perhaps for this reason Y tends traditionally to be counted among the consonants.
Ben, read and weep, Whitely was my b!tch
Ben Patrick wrote:dawson99 wrote:dawson99 wrote:The letter Y can be regarded as both a vowel and a consonant. In terms of sound, a vowel is 'a speech sound which is produced by comparatively open configuration of the vocal tract, with vibration of the vocal cords but without audible friction...', while a consonant is 'a basic speech sound in which the breath is at least partly obstructed'. The letter Y can be used to represent different sounds in different words, and can therefore fit either definition. In myth or hymn it's clearly a vowel, and also in words such as my, where it stands for a diphthong (a combination of two vowel sounds). On the other hand, in a word like beyond there is an obstacle to the breath which can be heard between two vowels, and the same sound begins words like young and yes. (This consonant sound, like that of the letter W, is sometimes called a 'semivowel' because it is made in a similar way to a vowel, but functions in contrast to vowels when used in words.) Whether the letter Y is a vowel or a consonant is therefore rather an arbitrary decision. The letter is probably more often used as a vowel, but in this role it's often interchangeable with the letter I. However, the consonant sound is not consistently represented in English spelling by any other letter, and perhaps for this reason Y tends traditionally to be counted among the consonants.
Ben, read and weep, Whitely was my b!tch
i am not reading that, this is the afternoon and in the afternoons i listen to the spice girls to chillax me.
andy_g wrote:Kenny Kan wrote:One word, three letters, two vowels and one consonant...
YES
can't believe you've announced yourself to the forum with a basic grammatical error.
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