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Answer for the clue "Either of two in this answer ", 5 letters:
vowel

Alternative clues for the word vowel

Word definitions for vowel in dictionaries

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 (context phonetics English) A sound produced by the vocal cords with relatively little restriction of the oral cavity, forming the prominent sound of a syllable. 2 A letter representing the sound of vowel; in English, the vowels are ''a'', ''e'', ''i'', ...

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
c.1300, from Old French voieul (Modern French voyelle ), from Latin vocalis , in littera vocalis , literally "vocal letter," from vox (genitive vocis ) "voice" (see voice (n.)). Vowel shift in reference to the pronunciation change between Middle and Modern ...

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. a speech sound made with the vocal tract open [syn: vowel sound ] [ant: consonant ] a letter of the alphabet standing for a spoken vowel

Usage examples of vowel.

His use of final vowels after the noun, and his rejection of the pronoun, which apocope in the Arabic verb renders necessary in the everyday speech of the people, told the Master he was listening to some archaic, uncorrupted form of the language.

The cuneiform system of writing was syllabic, each character denoting a syllable, so that we know what were the vowels in a proper name as well as the consonants.

He wanted me to study his tongue positions as he demonstrated the pronunciation of consonants, diphthongs, long and short vowels.

Iodine has a name that starts with two vowels, but so do einsteinium and europium.

Sometimes spelled Cassilde, or the final vowel sometimes elided in spoken language.

Exeter, and was a nephew of John Vowel, alias Hoker, Chamberlain and Historian of the city.

When quoting Primitive Elvish forms, I will however use circumflexes to mark long vowels.

The Wittes cordially loathed and refused to acknowledge these distant cousins, who during the War of The Tiers defiantly split from the main family, changed a vowel, were classified as Fourths, and continued to use the Witte colors of yellow and red to irritate their Blood relations.

One night, back when he was a second-story man, he had the incredible luck to break into the affluent home of Minne Khlaetsch, an astrologer of the Hamburg School, who was, congenitally it seems, unable to pronounce, even perceive, umlauts over vowels.

There was an absence from this section both of the modern philological and archeological spirit, and the report reads more like that of a congress of University tutors of the last century met to discuss the reading of a passage in a Greek play, or the accentuation of a vowel, before the dawn of Comparative Philology had swept away the cobwebs of the Scholiasts.

And so it was natural enough that they should be shared by various ladies, who, having conjugated the verb to live as far as the preterpluperfect tense, were ready to change one of its vowels and begin with it in the present indicative.

For my part, I consider Silverdale was very well served for having been so quizzy and disobliging about accepting my vowels, but Evelyn said that it was of the first importance to recover the wretched thing before Silverdale discovered that it was only a copy.

There is no bigger fool than a man who multiplies his vowels in a desperate bid to recoup his losses.

F, though having a name beginning with a vowel, is numbered by the grammarians among the semivowels, yet has this quality of a mute, that it is commodiously sounded before a liquid, as flask, fry, freckle.

We constantly notice in his verse that dainty effect which the ear loves, and which comes from deft marshalling of consonants and vowels, so that they shall add their suppler and subtler reinforcement to the steady infantry tramp of rhythm.