Erstellt von Christina Shook
vor mehr als 5 Jahre
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Frage | Antworten |
Phonics | a method in which basic phonetics, the study of human speech sounds, is used to teach beginning reading. |
Phonetics | the study of human speech sounds |
Phoneme | the smallest sound unit of language that distinguishes one word from another |
phonemic awareness | the ability to recognize spoken words as a sequence of individual sounds. Being able to distinguish or differentiate between the sounds that make up a word and apply this knowledge as it relates to the written word form of a word is an essential skill in beginning reading |
consonant | a sound represented by any letter of the English alphabet except a,e,i,o,u,w,y. (sounds made by closing or restricting the breath canal) |
consonant blend | sounds in a syllable represented by two or more letters that are blended together without losing their own identities |
vowel | a sound represented by a,e,i,o,u and sometimes y and w in the English alphabet (sounds made without closing or restricting the breath canal) |
dipthong | a single vowel sound made up of a glide from one vowel sound to another in immediate sequence and pronounced in one syllable |
r-controlled vowel | when a vowel letter is followed by the letter r, it affects the vowel sound so that it is neither short not long |
schwa sound | an unstressed sound commonly occurring in unstressed syllables (represented by // and closely resembles short sound for u |
grapheme | a letter or combination of letters that represents a phoneme (sound) |
digraph | two letters that stand for a single phoneme (sound) |
onset | the consonant sound(s) of a syllable that comes before the vowel sound |
rime | the part of a syllable that includes the vowel sound and any consonant sounds that some after it |
phonogram |
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