Omits as vowels
Crossword Clue

  • We have found 29 answers to crossword clue "Omits as vowels"
  • The Best Answer: 10/10
AnswerCrossword Clue
ELIDESOmits, as vowels
ELIDESOmits, as in scanning poetry
SLURElide, as vowels
ELIDESSkips over, as vowels
TEMPECity that becomes another city if you change both its vowels to A's
diphthonga union of two vowels pronounced in one syllable / to pronounce as a diphthong
PESTOTopping that becomes the food it's eaten with when its vowels are changed to A's
diereticsign (¨) placed over the second of two vowels, indicating it is pronounced separately, as in Noël
vowelizedSupply (something such as a Hebrew or shorthand text) with vowel points or signs representing vowels
vowelizingSupply (something such as a Hebrew or shorthand text) with vowel points or signs representing vowels
dieresessign (¨) placed over the second of two vowels, indicating it is pronounced separately, as in Noël
vowelizesSupply (something such as a Hebrew or shorthand text) with vowel points or signs representing vowels
dieresissign (¨) placed over the second of two vowels, indicating it is pronounced separately, as in Noël
TEMPEU.S. city whose name becomes another city's name if you change both its vowels to A's
triphthongsA union of three vowels (letters or sounds) pronounced in one syllable (as in some pronunciations of our)
triphthongA union of three vowels (letters or sounds) pronounced in one syllable (as in some pronunciations of our)
oronasalpronounced with the voice issuing through the mouth and the nose simultaneously, as in the nasalized vowels of French
orinasalpronounced with the voice issuing through the mouth and the nose simultaneously, as in the nasalized vowels of French
segmentsThe smallest distinct part of a spoken utterance, in particular the vowels and consonants as opposed to stress and intonation
segmentThe smallest distinct part of a spoken utterance, in particular the vowels and consonants as opposed to stress and intonation
schwaan unstressed mid-central vowel (as the usual sound of the first and last vowels of the English word America)
schwasan unstressed mid-central vowel (as the usual sound of the first and last vowels of the English word America)
nonnasalarticulated with none of the voice issuing through the nose, as the normal English vowels and the consonants b and v
suprasegmentalof or relating to significant features (as stress, pitch, or juncture) that occur simultaneously with vowels and consonants in an utterance
linkingDenoting a consonant that is sounded at a boundary between two words or morphemes where two vowels would otherwise be adjacent, as in law(r) and order
tildesa mark ÿ placed especially over the letter n (as in Spanish se±or sir) to denote the sound ? or over vowels (as in Portuguese irmÒ sister) to indicate nasality
diphthongsA sound formed by the combination of two vowels in a single syllable, in which the sound begins as one vowel and moves toward another (as in coin, loud, and side)
suprasegmentalpertaining to or noting features of speech, as stress, pitch, and length, that accompany individual consonants and vowels and may extend over more than one such segmental element; pertaining to junctural and prosodic features
ablauta systematic variation of vowels in the same root or affix or in related roots or affixes especially in the Indo-European languages that is usually paralleled by differences in use or meaning (as in sing, sang, sung, song)