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moyamick | 18:35 Wed 11th Oct 2006 | People & Places
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which part of london has a name with more consonants in a row than any other place in britain.
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Knightsbridge?
More than any other place in England, maybe, but surely not in Britain. Llanfairpwllgwynghyllgogerychwrndrobwllllantysiliogogoch has 15 consonants in a row, and I can't imagine anywhere in London can match that..........
Narolines what are you talking about? The most consecutive consonants in Llanfairp.g. etc. is 4 i.e. RNDR. Nowhere in the name are there more than 4 consecutive consonants.
bernardo...... huh???
'Y' is a vowel in such words as 'hymn' or 'rhythm', not a consonant. In addition, 'W' is a vowel in Welsh words such as 'cwm', the equivalent of English 'combe'.
quizmonster, you are right the welsh language has different vowels to english, and cwm means valley
that last answer was from me, was signed in as my missus
So does 'combe', Welshwil/Lithuanian!
In the words of Captain Mainwaring - well done; I wondered who'd be the first to spot that!
kelbillug:

LL = 1 consonant
A = 1 vowel
NF = 2 consonants
AI = 2 vowels
RP = 2 consonants
W = 1 vowel
LLG = 2 consonants
WY = 2 vowels
NG = 2 consonants
Y = 1 vowel
LLG = 2 consonants
O = 1 vowel
G = 1 consonant
E = 1 vowel
R = 1 consonant
Y = 1 vowel
CH = 1 consonant
WY = 2 vowels
RNDR = 4 consonants
O = 1 consonant
B = 1 consonant
W = 1 vowel
LLLL = 2 consonants
A = 1 vowel
NT = 2 consonants
Y = 1 vowel
S = 1 consonant
I = 1 vowel
L = 1 consonant
IO = 2 vowels
G = 1 consonant
O = 1 vowel
G = 1 consonant
O = 1 vowel
G = 1 consonant
O = 1 vowel
CH = 1 consonant
I feel like such an idiot!! I SHOULD know that, my heritage is Welsh, I speak a small bit of Welsh (including knowing how to say the full version of Llanfair PG!) I guess I just didn't realise they considered the W as a vowel, I just knew it was pronounced as one.

::sheepish grin::
ummm... no Welsh pun intended on the 'sheepish' comment!! :)

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