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FA 19 10.7 A E I O U sometimes Y (Anika's Task)
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Does the "sometimes Y" in the task title mean that if there's a Y, it has to be acting as a vowel to count?
Rosemary wrote: "Does the "sometimes Y" in the task title mean that if there's a Y, it has to be acting as a vowel to count?"Example? (Allow me to hedge.)
Paul Beatty is example. I gave myself combo points for the Y having the long E sound. But an example as the other would be Yann Martel because it is the hard Y sound.
Is that what you were thinking, Rosemary?
(Just a side note: when I wrote the task title, it was mainly because the song of that title by ‘80s band Ebn Ozn was stuck in my head...I’d intended any “y” to count...)
Rebekah wrote: "Paul Beatty is example. I gave myself combo points for the Y having the long E sound. But an example as the other would be Yann Martel because it is the hard Y sound.
..."
Paul Beatty would work, but Yann Martel doesn't work because even if the Y counted, there are only 3 unique vowels (YAE)
Elizabeth (Alaska) wrote: "Rebekah wrote: "Paul Beatty is example. I gave myself combo points for the Y having the long E sound. But an example as the other would be Yann Martel because it is the..."
Got it! Was just trying to think of a Y as a consonant example.
Thanks Anika for that! I was hoping you meant any Y would count!
Elizabeth (Alaska) wrote: "Rosemary wrote: "Does the "sometimes Y" in the task title mean that if there's a Y, it has to be acting as a vowel to count?"Example? (Allow me to hedge.)"
Rising to the challenge of finding examples from my TBR (as the idea of having more than 5 vowels is strange to me) ... :)
Rudyard Kipling A I U Y
Patience Gray A E I Y
E H Young E O U Y
Hilary Boyd A I O Y
Tracy Chevalier A E I Y
Stella Duffy A E U Y
Catherine Ryan Hyde A E I Y
Ryan Levesque A E U Y
Frederick Marryat A E I Y
Tiffany Murray A I U Y
Dorothy L. Sayers A E O Y
I made a space because I'm unsure about the first three. The others seem to me to be clearly using Y as if it were a vowel ...?
And I take it the other letters are okay regardless of the sound? For example, Antonia White A E I O, the E is not acting as a vowel sound, but that's still okay?
Rosemary wrote: "Rising to the challenge of finding examples from my TBR "Well, good job! Anika says above in Post #5 that she was intending all Y's count, so you're good with all of these.
As for Antonia White, the E does act as a vowel, because it determines the pronunciation of the earlier I.
We'll just count 4 of the 6 letters in the name and call it good.
Beth wrote: "Yes, does that count, since it has 5 of the 6 vowels?"Yes, 4 is the minimum. Sorry, no bonus for 5 or 6.
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Edgar Rice Burroughs (other topics)Patience Gray (other topics)
Rudyard Kipling (other topics)
Hilary Boyd (other topics)
E.H. Young (other topics)
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Example: Jane Hamilton would work (four unique vowels: a, e, i, o), while Agatha Christie would not (only containing three unique vowels: a, e, i).
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