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Sabbir_1

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* “Dreamt” is the only word in English that ends with “mt”.
* The word “SET” has more defination than any other word in English Language.
* “Underground” is the only word in the English Language that start and end with “und”.
* There are only four words in the English Language that ends with “dous” (tremendous, horrendous,stupendous and hazardous).
* There is a seven letter word in the English Language that contains ten words without re-arranging any of its letters, “therein”: the, there, he, in ,rein, here, ere, therein, herein.
* “Stewardesses” is the longest English word that is typed with left handed only.
* The only fifteen letter that can be spelled without repeating a letter is “uncopyrightable”.
* The longest word in the English according to the Oxford English Dictionary is: “pneunomoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis”. (Oh!! How to pronounce it….)
 
salamualikum.
brummy is just the best *touch ma blud* :shade:
&& hey that last word you made it up hmpftt ;D && also where you get all these from dude :uuh:
Ma'assalama
 
:sl:

Sky? Fly? Spy? By? Fry? Why?

(Okay so they all sound the same lol but not my fault...)

Y is considered to be both a vowel and a non-vowel depending on it's pronunciation. If it carries the i or e pronunciation as in sky it is considered a vowel but when it has the y pronunciation as in Yes it is not a vowel.

The old grade school teaching of vowels was:

A,e,i,o,u and sometimes y
 
* The longest word in the English according to the Oxford English Dictionary is: “pneunomoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis”. (Oh!! How to pronounce it….)

das quite short^^

longest word is the word das used for people who have a phobia of long words :thumbs_do :muddlehea


jazaks anyways-Peace
 
vow·el Pronunciation (voul)
n.
1. A speech sound, such as () or (), created by the relatively free passage of breath through the larynx and oral cavity, usually forming the most prominent and central sound of a syllable.
2. A letter, such as a, e, i, o, u, and sometimes y in the English alphabet, that represents a vowel.



Source: http://www.answers.com/topic/vowel


Still taught that way.
 
:sl: there is now word in the english language that rhymes with silver
 
As the English Professor told the class "Did you know that sugar is the only English word in which the s is pronounced as sh?" And one of the students replied "Sure"
 
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