There’s Only One U.S. State Whose Name Starts with Two Vowels. Can You Guess It?

See how quickly you can figure it out!

The United States of AmericaAlpha_7D/Shutterstock

If you picked the name of a U.S. state, at random, out of a hat, you would have slightly less than a one in four chance of choosing one that starts with a vowel. Twelve of the 50 United States have names that start with a vowel. But you’d only have a one in 50 chance of choosing one that starts with two consecutive vowels—because there’s only one. Any ideas which it is? Once you work out the answer to this fun brain game, see if you can also figure out which letter never appears in any U.S. state name.

Which state name starts with two vowels? 

If you live in the midwest, this might have been a no-brainer—specifically, if you live in a certain state situated between the Missouri and Mississippi Rivers. That’s right, the answer is Iowa! Its name, of course, starts with an “I” followed by an “O”—no other state’s name begins with two vowels in a row. (Go ahead, test it out with every other state name that starts with a vowel!) Want to know how Iowa got that name? Here’s the story behind the origin of every U.S. state name.

iowaAlpha_7D/Shutterstock

And that’s not the only vowel-related bit of trivia that makes Iowa unique. It’s also the only state whose two-letter abbreviation consists of two vowels. That may not seem surprising—until you realize that its abbreviation is actually not the same two letters it starts with! The state abbreviation for Iowa is “IA,” not “IO.” After all, Iowa does contain four letters, three of which are vowels. (The same is actually true for Ohio, but the distinction doesn’t carry over to its abbreviation, “OH.”)

What about on the other end of the words? Well, ending with two consecutive vowels is less of a distinction for U.S. state names—nine of them do it. In fact, it’s actually rarer for them to end with two consecutive consonants! (Seriously!) And if you think that’s interesting, test your knowledge with these history trivia questions.

Sources:

Meghan Jones
Meghan Jones is a word nerd who has been writing for RD.com since 2017. You can find her byline on pieces about grammar, fun facts, the meanings of various head-scratching words and phrases, and more. Meghan graduated from Marist College with a Bachelor of Arts in English in 2017; her creative nonfiction piece “Anticipation” was published in the Spring 2017 issue of Angles literary magazine.