Forum Discussion
Delete cells with exactly three syllables
- Oct 03, 2025
If you had been intending to identify word length in syllables, you would need a pronunciation source, such as most dictionaries. The Gutenberg Project offers (for free) this old-but-undated Webster's Unabridged Dictionary that could be used for that; the extraction of words and their syllable counts would include significant VBA coding. But the derived word forms (noun plurals, verb tenses, etc.) would be incomplete, and as this is an old work, some word spellings have changed, some pronunciations have changed, and other words were then not yet in use.
Identifying the number of consonants is more straightforward, but the sometimes-vowels Y and W cause a problem. See the attached workbook for more information and a partial solution. The count of consonants can mostly be done with formulas (I used helper columns). But to "delete" words requires a script; I include VBA code for that in the workbook. (The workbook is not macro-enabled; I will assume that you know how to create and edit macros.)
Edit: The forum software again loses a file that I attached (but it was not the one I intended anyway). Trying again...
Edit #2: Well that failed also. So access the workbook on OneDrive: 2025-10-02 RAHI words containing 3 consonants.xlsx
Forget about whether it's possible in Excel. Let me answer with a question about words: my question is whether it is possible to have a universally valid definition of what a syllable is, and how we would infallibly recognize one just based on looking at the word?
There are, after all, so many combinations of consonants and vowels that make up our words, along with multiple ways to pronounce them; I'm certainly aware that hyphenation in automated texts doesn't always follow a reliable algorithm. Yet that's what you seem to be expecting.
I had a PhD friend who acknowledged he'd pronounced "epitome" as a three syllable word--"e pi tome"--that last section rhyming with "home"
He was very embarrassed to learn it was properly "e pi to me"
How would you propose that Excel would recognize whether it was three syllables or four, absent a database containing a complete dictionary?
If you had been intending to identify word length in syllables, you would need a pronunciation source, such as most dictionaries. The Gutenberg Project offers (for free) this old-but-undated Webster's Unabridged Dictionary that could be used for that; the extraction of words and their syllable counts would include significant VBA coding. But the derived word forms (noun plurals, verb tenses, etc.) would be incomplete, and as this is an old work, some word spellings have changed, some pronunciations have changed, and other words were then not yet in use.
Identifying the number of consonants is more straightforward, but the sometimes-vowels Y and W cause a problem. See the attached workbook for more information and a partial solution. The count of consonants can mostly be done with formulas (I used helper columns). But to "delete" words requires a script; I include VBA code for that in the workbook. (The workbook is not macro-enabled; I will assume that you know how to create and edit macros.)
Edit: The forum software again loses a file that I attached (but it was not the one I intended anyway). Trying again...
Edit #2: Well that failed also. So access the workbook on OneDrive: 2025-10-02 RAHI words containing 3 consonants.xlsx
- RahirosOct 19, 2025Copper Contributor
Thank you very much for this response!
Is there any way to modify this to then search for words with 3 consecutive consonants?
- RahirosOct 15, 2025Copper Contributor
This also works perfectly, thank you!
- mathetesOct 12, 2025Silver Contributor
Rahiros​ : It looks to me as if SnowMan55​ has solved your challenging problem. Take a look at his solution and (commendably) his explanation! If it does do what you need, please mark is as the solution.