Word (1 Syllable):
Word Compound:
VIP:
Diagraphs:
Closed syllable:
Open Syllable:
Minimum Syllable:
Consonant Cluster:
Syllabic Consonant:
- is never divided.
- has one or more letters, but one vowel sound.
- is produced by single voice impulse.
- Example: (beat) .
Word Compound:
- is divided between the words that make it.
- Example: (cow / boy - sun / set).
VIP:
- (be - de - ex - re): in the beginning make a syllable of their own.
- Vowel sounded alone : forms a syllable itself. Example (grad / u / ate).
- Number of vowel sounds = number of syllables.
- The word is divided between the affix and the root. Example (melt / ed - dis / turb).
Diagraphs:
- 2 Consonants make a single sound.
- can't be divided.
- (Ch - sh - th - wh - ng - nk - ck ......).
- Example: (buck / le - noth / ing - cash / ier).
Closed syllable:
- Ends with Consonant.
- Short vowel or Shwa.
Open Syllable:
- Ends with a Vowel.
- Generally Long.
Minimum Syllable:
- a single Vowel in isolation.
- proceeded and followed by silence.
- Example: (are - or).
Consonant Cluster:
- 2 or more Consonants together.
- Example: ( inspect ) -- ( 3 consonants).
Syllabic Consonant:
- Syllable contains no vowel at all, consists entirely of consonants.
- it occures after another consonant.
- Example: (bottle - muddle).
- most obvious in words ending with 1 or more consonants, followed by (le). Example: (cattle - couple - bottling - struggle).
- Followed by (al - el), Example: (panel - pedal - parcel).
- Syllabic (n) is most common after alveolar plosives, bilabial and fricatives. Example: (eaten).
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