I was looking in the AWAD archives, hoping for inspiration for starting a new thread. I came upon the following by
sheer coincidence. I apologize for the extreme length, but
we can't link to any single entry, and it can be tedious to find one among the entire list. I think there is a lot here that people will find worth commenting on.
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Date: Thu, 14 Jul 1994 00:03:11 -0400 (EDT)
Subject: A.Word.A.Day--jalousie
X-Bonus: Multitasking allows screwing up several things at once.

jal.ou.sie \'jal-*-se_-\ n : a blind, window, or door with
adjustable horizontal slats or louvers for control of light and air

--
notice anything special about the word? it has all the vowels in its
spelling. and only once. - anu


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Date: Fri, 15 Jul 1994 09:24:54 -0400
Subject: Re: A.Word.A.Day--jalousie

I didn't intend to send a followup on today's mailing but
looking at the volume and enthusiasm of replies, I couldn't
keep without sharing them with you.

Many suggested the words facetious, abstemious and arsenious
all of which have all the vowels occuring only once and in
order. Among those who sent in one or more of these words are:
Linguaphiles Martha (albion.edu), Pete Cottrels (umd.edu),
Zach (att.com), Marc Picard (concordia.ca), Brian Battles
(arrl.org), Mortnsue (aol.com), Garthe Nelson (ucsb.edu),
C. Sudhama (mot.com), Evan Robinson (mit.edu), Ullas Gargi
(psu.edu), Guy Jacobs (ukans.edu), David Powers (flinders.edu.au)
Miriam Shlesinger (biu.ac.il, Israel) and Manojkumar Saranathan
(washington.edu). In addition, Saranathan came up with this
word with all the vowels in reverse order: duoliteral.

Linguaphile Tim Lee from datapath.co.uk recalled a vacation
he took years ago in California, where he saw the giant red-woods,
the sequoia trees. He points out that "Not only does 'sequoia'
have all the vowels and only once, it also has only two consonants."

Now, how about a crash course in French? Linguaphile Jean Wilmotte
hailing from ucl.ac.be ("be" is the country code for Belgium)
wrote to inform that jalousie has a second meaning in French --
jealousy. It had me thinking what jealousy had to do with venetian
blinds. But I didn't have to wait for long. Manfred Borzechowski
of alcatel.de (de = Germany) piped in with the etymology. Here
is a peek at the historical roots of the word:

Such blinds served in old Arabic ages to protect from being
seen when having an intimate relationship, so that nobody
else would become jealous.

Frits Stuurman from ruu.nl (nl = Netherlands, which incidentally, is
written as Nederland in Netherlands/Nederland/Holland) was reminded
of James Joyce's Ulysses where "there is also something about
aeiou = a.e. [initials of one of Joyce's friends, I seem to remember]
I owe you;"

Bruce Nevin of lightstream.com greped (grep is computerese for search)
in /usr/dict/words and sent a list of 54 words with all the vowels.
Did I say all the vowels? A couple of linguaphiles expressed doubt
whether I was forgetting `y' when I said the word `jalousie' has all
the vowels in it. Garthe of ucsb.edu had probably already thought of
it. He wrote: "the most remarkable word of this kind that I've found
is `facetious' which not only has all the vowels exactly once but also
in alphabetical order. It can even accommodate the `sometimes y'
clause with the addition of `ly' to form `facetiously', still in
alphabetical order."

On a cool, cloudy morning on the shore of Lake Erie...
Anu