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interjections

Fun Facts About English #19 – Words Without Vowels

08/23/2019 by admin

Fun Facts About English 19 Kinney Brothers Publishing

When determining how ‘the longest word with no vowels’ is defined, competing words are pared down with criteria that include pronunciation, spelling, and commonality in the contemporary English lexis.

Orthographic conventions typically represent vowel sounds with the five vowel symbols a, e, i, o, u, as well as y, which may also be a consonant depending on context. A word, as it is defined, is “the smallest unit of grammar that can stand alone as a complete utterance, separated by spaces in written language and potentially by pauses in speech.”

There are few words in English that don’t have vowels because the vowel sounds are not written with vowel letters or are pronounced without vowel sounds. These include cwtch (a shed or hiding place) and crwth (a Celtic stringed instrument), both uncommon words of Welsh origin where w serves as the symbol for the oo sound. Welsh also gives us the vowel-less 15th-century word twyndyllyngs, meaning ‘twins.’ The more contemporary grrrl, (from the phrase ‘riot girl’) describes a subculture of feminism and punk rock.

Abbreviations, if interpreted as words, are often without vowels, e.g., Mrs., Dr., TV, and nth (as in “to the nth degree”). Interjections and onomatopoeias such as shh, hmm, psst, and brr are also examples of “complete utterances” without a vowel. Spellings such as hmmmmmmmmm can be extended ad infinitum and are excluded from the competition.

If you consider ‘y’ to be an eliminating vowel, and don’t include abbreviations or interjections, then the longest lexical word is tsktsks at seven letters.

If you consider ‘y’ to be a consonant and not a vowel, then rhythms is the longest common English word, also at seven letters. In both of these cases, adding ‘s’ to the end of the word pushes the letter counts past the more common six-letter competitors.

Runners-up are six-letter words and one obscure seven-letter word:

  • spryly – An adverb meaning nimbly, agilely or quickly.
  • trysts – Often refers to clandestine or secret meetings.
  • crypts – Places where dead people are buried.
  • myrrhs – The oils and essences used in perfumery derived from a small spiny tree of the same name.
  • syzygy – A noun that mostly translates as ‘a pairing of elements or a fusion of parts.’
  • glycyls – A term in medicine that can be a noun for the acyl radical of glycine, or an extremely complicated adjective referring to glycinic residues in proteins or polypeptides.

If you enjoyed this post, check out the ancient legacy of crossword puzzles! You might also be interested in the challenge of creating ambigams, pangrams, and palindromes!

See the previous or next Fun Facts About English

Donald's English Classroom

If you teach sight words in your ESL classes, Donald’s English Classroom has loads of engaging materials for your lessons. Easy Sight Words worksheets, Bingo, Flash Cards, and more are ready for download! Thanks for visiting!

Filed Under: Fun Facts About English Tagged With: abbreviations, Donald's English Classroom, english language, fun facts about english, interjections, kinney brothers publishing, lexical words, linguistic analysis, linguistic exploration, linguistic trivia, longest word with no vowels, orthographic conventions, vowel sounds, Welsh origin, word criteria

Fun Facts About English #3 – The Shortest Sentence

05/03/2019 by admin

Fun Facts About English 3 Kinney Brothers Publishing

There is a debate going on in the lingual sphere as to what defines the shortest sentence in the English language and which sentence deserves the honor. By definition, a sentence needs a subject and a predicate to make sense. With you as an understood subject, we can easily make a one-word sentence with a one-word predicate:

Go.
Think.
Eat.
Wait.

The omission of you from the sentence is known as an ellipsis and is the preferred form for the imperative mood. With this idea in mind, using two words is the shortest sentence you can make in English. However, it’s argued that “you go” by letter count is not the shortest sentence.

Therefore, the shortest non-elliptical sentence would be:

I am.

I’d be negligent to the topic if I didn’t mention a joke from the legendary comedian, George Carlin, who said, “I am is reportedly the shortest sentence in the English language. Could it be that I do is the longest sentence?”

As for non-elliptical complete sentences, you could also make the argument, depending on how you measure sentence length, that the contraction ‘Tis is just as short or shorter than I am. Unfortunately, this word is often excluded from the competition given its archaic status.

Whether or not the single word no constitutes a complete sentence depends on how one defines a sentence. Most people understand a sentence to mean:

“…a word, clause, or phrase or a group of clauses or phrases forming a syntactic unit which expresses an assertion, a question, a command, a wish, an exclamation, or the performance of an action, that in writing usually begins with a capital letter and concludes with appropriate end punctuation, and that in speaking is distinguished by characteristic patterns of stress, pitch, and pauses.”

Yes and no, when used as answers, belong to the parts of speech known as interjections and pro-sentences. An interjection includes exclamations such as ouch and wow. A pro-sentence is a function word or expression “that substitutes for a whole sentence whose content is recoverable from the context.” In English, yes, no, and okay are common pro-sentences. It is argued that no is not a complete sentence as there is no subject or predicate.

Examples:

Interjection:
Jenny stole the candy from her brother.
He screamed, “Noooooo!”

Pro-sentence:
Are you tired?
No. (I’m not tired.)

Nonsense:
What time is it?
No.

So, there you have it. Now you have to decide! Which word or words do you think deserves the medal for the shortest sentence in the English language?

You might also be interested in learning about the word with the most vowels, the longest word with no vowels, or the longest monosyllabic word!

See the previous or next Fun Facts About English

Donald's English Classroom

Teaching phonics is the cornerstone of many ESL programs. Kinney Brothers Publishing has a full range of engaging phonics textbooks that you’ll love using in class! Check out all our phonics and spelling resources available on our website at kinneybrothers.com or visit our online store, Donald’s English Classroom!

Filed Under: Fun Facts About English Tagged With: Donald's English Classroom, ellipsis in language, English grammar, English language facts, fun facts about english, George Carlin joke, imperative sentences, interjections, kinney brothers publishing, linguistic debate, pro-sentences, sentence definition, shortest sentence English

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