Reading with Style discussion
note: This topic has been closed to new comments.
Archives
>
FA 19 10.7 A E I O U sometimes Y (Anika's Task)
date
newest »



Example? (Allow me to hedge.)

But an example as the other would be Yann Martel because it is the hard Y sound.
Is that what you were thinking, Rosemary?


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)

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!

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?

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.

Yes, 4 is the minimum. Sorry, no bonus for 5 or 6.
This topic has been frozen by the moderator. No new comments can be posted.
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)
More...
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).
Post any questions or comments about task 10.7 in this thread.