vowelstripping
Vowelstripping is a text processing technique that removes vowels from strings of text, typically the letters a, e, i, o, and u, with optional handling of y as a vowel. It can be applied to individual words, phrases, or entire corpora. The result is a consonant skeleton of the original text, sometimes used for obfuscation, stylization, or compact representation in certain processing pipelines.
Variants vary: complete vowel removal; selective removal (for example, only short vowels); and rules that preserve
Examples illustrate the effect. Vowelstripping("vowelstripping") yields "vwlstrppng", and "information retrieval" becomes "nfrmtn rtrvl". Such examples show
Applications span several domains. In linguistics and phonology, vowelstripping can help analyze consonant structure or syllable
Limitations include substantial readability loss and potential information loss, since vowels often carry important grammatical and