For me? E. So many good words start with E.
Favorite word? Enunciate. Why? Because you have to do the definition of the word to say the word. I don't think it's even possible to mumble or gargle that word out. You have to...Enunciate...to say it.
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For me? E. So many good words start with E.
Favorite word? Enunciate. Why? Because you have to do the definition of the word to say the word. I don't think it's even possible to mumble or gargle that word out. You have to...Enunciate...to say it.
þ and ƿ are two good ones I think. Why? Because they're cool.
Omicron because it's a sick letter ! ... k i'm out.
Y.... just Y....
U because I should've made a U-turn when I saw this thread.
U right now.
I saw a meme that called Viera Bnuuy's the other day and now i cant get the word out of my head.
Z
Not sure, this came to mind first
Z
ZZZZZZZZZ
A because of....
https://ftw.usatoday.com/wp-content/...0&h=576&crop=1
F
Because all the Cool American Fighter Jets and 1 Bomber :cool:
W
In my country, W can sound like a "u" or a "v".
And since my name starts with W, a lot of people spells my name wrong :) This is cool 'cause I like the ideia of so few people knows me for real.
(I'm brazilian and we talk portuguese here).
Only if you're speaking/writing in the original language of the words origin. Otherwise you make due with the phonetics of the language you're speaking/writing in.
That letter doesn't exist in the English alphabet, therefore it wouldn't be used when speaking or writing the word in English.
If you did, you'd just be inserting a random foreign language word into the middle of your sentence. Which; phonetically and grammatically; is not correct.
It's hard to choose one, these are my faves: Z, E, N, O, S.
C
The letter C always has an applicable term or word to decribe someone or something.
M
It's up to you to imagine whatever reason
Z because it's Zed and I can tell Americans how wrong they are when they pronounce it.
X
Cause it is tied to lots of good things in life.
H because my name starts with H.
O bc it’s round
It's a diæresis over the I. It is an English grammatical mark that means "seperate the vowels" when you say it.
coöperate and reëstablish are other words using the diæresis, although lately people have been using hyphens for these ones.
It's use is likely rarer in the USA than other parts of the English speaking world, but it is used in that country too to a lesser extent, mostly in the New Yorker who are using a style guide from the 1920s still.
Zed, because it upsets so many English speakers, lol.
F.... cuz it could be used as a chair if you flip it
F and U for obvious reasons
ÖÖÖÖÖÖÖÖÖÖÖÖÖÖÖÖÖÖÖÖ
D always the D
A
... test of your reflexes!
I like Z a lot.