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Phonics Rules
The vowels are "a,e,i,o, and u"; also sometimes "y" &
"w". This also includes the diphthongs "oi,oy,ou,ow,au,aw,
oo" and many others.
The consonants are all the other letters which stop or limit the flow of air
from the throat in speech. They are:
"b,c,d,f,g,h,j,k,l,m,n,p,qu,r,s,t,v,w,x,y,z,ch,sh,th,ph,wh, ng, and
gh".
1. Sometimes the rules don't work.
There are many exceptions in English because of the vastness of the language
and the many languages from which it has borrowed. The rules do work however,
in the majority of the words.
2. Every syllable in every word must have a vowel.
English is a "vocal" language; Every word must have a vowel.
3. "C" followed by "e, i or y" usually has the
soft sound of "s". Examples: "cyst",
"central", and "city".
4. "G" followed by "e, i or y" usually has the
soft sound of "j". Example: "gem",
"gym", and "gist".
5. When 2 consonants are joined together and form one new sound, they
are a consonant digraph. They count as one sound and one letter and
are never separated. Examples: "ch,sh,th,ph and wh".
6. When a syllable ends in a consonant and has only one vowel, that
vowel is short. Examples: "fat, bed, fish, spot, luck".
7. When a syllable ends in a silent "e", the silent
"e" is a signal that the vowel in front of it is long. Examples:
"make, gene, kite, rope, and use".
8. When a syllable has 2 vowels together, the first vowel is usually
long and the second is silent. Examples: "pain, eat, boat,
res/cue, say, grow". NOTE: Diphthongs don't follow this rule; In a
diphthong, the vowels blend together to create a single new sound. The
diphthongs are: "oi,oy,ou,ow,au,aw, oo" and many others.
9. When a syllable ends in any vowel and is the only vowel, that
vowel is usually long. Examples: "pa/per, me, I, o/pen, u/nit,
and my".
10. When a vowel is followed by an "r" in the same
syllable, that vowel is "r-controlled". It is not long nor
short. "R-controlled "er,ir,and ur" often sound the same (like
"er"). Examples: "term, sir, fir, fur, far, for, su/gar,
or/der".
Basic Syllable Rules
1. To find the number of syllables:
---count the vowels in the word,
---subtract any silent vowels, (like the silent "e" at the end of a word or the second
vowel when two vowels a together in a syllable)
---subtract one vowel from every diphthong,
(diphthongs only count as one vowel sound.)
---the number of vowels sounds left is the same as the number of syllables.
The number of syllables that you hear when you pronounce a word is the same
as the number of vowels sounds heard. For example:
The word "came" has 2 vowels, but the
"e" is silent, leaving one vowel sound andone syllable.
The word "outside" has 4 vowels, but the
"e" is silent and the "ou" is a diphthong which counts as
only one sound, so this word has only two vowels sounds and therefore,
two syllables.
2. Divide between two middle consonants.
Split up words that have two middle consonants. For example:
hap/pen, bas/ket, let/ter, sup/per, din/ner, and Den/nis.
The only exceptions are the consonant digraphs. Never split up
consonant digraphs as they really represent only one sound. The exceptions
are "th", "sh", "ph", "th",
"ch", and "wh".
3. Usually divide before a single middle consonant.
When there is only one syllable, you usually divide in front of it, as in:
"o/pen", "i/tem", "e/vil", and
"re/port". The only exceptions are those times when the
first syllable has an obvious short sound, as in "cab/in".
4. Divide before the consonant before an "-le" syllable.
When you have a word that has the old-style spelling in which the
"-le" sounds like "-el", divide before the consonant
before the "-le". For example: "a/ble",
"fum/ble", "rub/ble" "mum/ble" and
"this/tle". The only exception to this are
"ckle" words like "tick/le".
5. Divide off any compound words, prefixes, suffixes and roots which
have vowel sounds.
Split off the parts of compound words like "sports/car" and
"house/boat". Divide off prefixes such at "un/happy",
"pre/paid", or "re/write". Also divide off suffixes as in
the words "farm/er", "teach/er", "hope/less"
and "care/ful". In the word "stop/ping", the suffix is
actually "-ping" because this word follows the rule that when you
add "-ing" to a word with one syllable, you double the last
consonant and add the "-ing".
Accent Rules
When a word has more than one syllable, one of the syllables is always a
little louder than the others. The syllable with the louder stress is the
accented syllable. It may seem that the placement of accents in words is
often random or accidental, but these are some rules that usually work.
1. Accents are often on the first syllable. Examples: ba'/sic, pro'/gram.
2. In words that have suffixes or prefixes, the accent is usually on the main
root word. Examples: box'/es, un/tie'.
3. If de-, re-, ex-, in-,po-, pro-, or a- is the first syllable in a word, it
is usually not accented. Examples: de/lay', ex/plore'.
4. Two vowel letters together in the last syllable of a word often indicates
an accented last syllable. Examples: com/plain', con/ceal'.
5. When there are two like consonant letters within a word, the syllable
before the double consonants is usually accented. Examples: be/gin'/ner,
let'/ter.
6. The accent is usually on the syllable before the suffixes -ion, ity, -ic,
-ical, -ian, -ial, or -ious, and on the second syllable before the suffix
-ate. Examples: af/fec/ta'/tion, dif/fer/en'/ti/ate.
7. In words of three or more syllables, one of the first two syllables is
usually accented. Examples: ac'/ci/dent, de/ter'/mine.
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