-
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 17
Commit
This commit does not belong to any branch on this repository, and may belong to a fork outside of the repository.
Sync the
pig-latin
exercise's docs with the latest data. (#352)
- Loading branch information
1 parent
abfa3e8
commit 29ddeac
Showing
1 changed file
with
44 additions
and
8 deletions.
There are no files selected for viewing
This file contains bidirectional Unicode text that may be interpreted or compiled differently than what appears below. To review, open the file in an editor that reveals hidden Unicode characters.
Learn more about bidirectional Unicode characters
Original file line number | Diff line number | Diff line change |
---|---|---|
@@ -1,10 +1,46 @@ | ||
# Instructions | ||
|
||
Your task is to translate text from English to Pig Latin using the following rules: | ||
|
||
- **Rule 1**: If a word begins with a vowel sound, add an "ay" sound to the end of the word (e.g. "apple" -> "appleay"). | ||
Please note that "xr" and "yt" at the beginning of a word make vowel sounds (e.g. "xray" -> "xrayay", "yttria" -> "yttriaay"). | ||
- **Rule 2**: If a word begins with a consonant sound, move it to the end of the word and then add an "ay" sound to the end of the word (e.g. "pig" -> "igpay"). | ||
Consonant sounds can be made up of multiple consonants, such as the "ch" in "chair" or "st" in "stand" (e.g. "chair" -> "airchay"). | ||
- **Rule 3**: If a word starts with a consonant sound followed by "qu", move them to the end of the word, and then add an "ay" sound to the end of the word (e.g. "square" -> "aresquay"). | ||
- **Rule 4**: If a word contains a "y" after a consonant cluster or as the second letter in a two letter word it makes a vowel sound (e.g. "rhythm" -> "ythmrhay", "my" -> "ymay"). | ||
Your task is to translate text from English to Pig Latin. | ||
The translation is defined using four rules, which look at the pattern of vowels and consonants at the beginning of a word. | ||
These rules look at each word's use of vowels and consonants: | ||
|
||
- vowels: the letters `a`, `e`, `i`, `o`, and `u` | ||
- consonants: the other 21 letters of the English alphabet | ||
|
||
## Rule 1 | ||
|
||
If a word begins with a vowel, or starts with `"xr"` or `"yt"`, add an `"ay"` sound to the end of the word. | ||
|
||
For example: | ||
|
||
- `"apple"` -> `"appleay"` (starts with vowel) | ||
- `"xray"` -> `"xrayay"` (starts with `"xr"`) | ||
- `"yttria"` -> `"yttriaay"` (starts with `"yt"`) | ||
|
||
## Rule 2 | ||
|
||
If a word begins with a one or more consonants, first move those consonants to the end of the word and then add an `"ay"` sound to the end of the word. | ||
|
||
For example: | ||
|
||
- `"pig"` -> `"igp"` -> `"igpay"` (starts with single consonant) | ||
- `"chair"` -> `"airch"` -> `"airchay"` (starts with multiple consonants) | ||
- `"thrush"` -> `"ushthr"` -> `"ushthray"` (starts with multiple consonants) | ||
|
||
## Rule 3 | ||
|
||
If a word starts with zero or more consonants followed by `"qu"`, first move those consonants (if any) and the `"qu"` part to the end of the word, and then add an `"ay"` sound to the end of the word. | ||
|
||
For example: | ||
|
||
- `"quick"` -> `"ickqu"` -> `"ay"` (starts with `"qu"`, no preceding consonants) | ||
- `"square"` -> `"aresqu"` -> `"aresquay"` (starts with one consonant followed by `"qu`") | ||
|
||
## Rule 4 | ||
|
||
If a word starts with one or more consonants followed by `"y"`, first move the consonants preceding the `"y"`to the end of the word, and then add an `"ay"` sound to the end of the word. | ||
|
||
Some examples: | ||
|
||
- `"my"` -> `"ym"` -> `"ymay"` (starts with single consonant followed by `"y"`) | ||
- `"rhythm"` -> `"ythmrh"` -> `"ythmrhay"` (starts with multiple consonants followed by `"y"`) |