When children start to learn to read longer words, knowing syllables, the 7 syllable types, and syllable division rules can make the process much simpler.
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What is a Syllable?
A syllable is an uninterrupted unit of sound that has at least one vowel. Syllables often have at least one consonant, too, but sometimes a syllable will only have a vowel.
Why are Syllables Important?
When children can segment words into syllables, they can:
- Divide longer words into smaller, manageable parts
- Encode (spell) new words with more ease
- Decode (read) new words with more ease
- Read longer words accurately and fluently (not by guessing)
The Importance of Vowels in Dividing Syllables
- Vowels are the key components of a syllable, for they add the audible sound (or produce the beat) in the syllable.
- The position and number of vowels in a word determines the sound of each syllable, and ultimately the sound of the word.
- The vowels in a word either produce a short sound, a long sound, a diphthong, or an r-controlled sound.
Syllable Division Rules
1. Separate prefixes and suffixes from root words.
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2. If two or more consonants are next to each other (VCCV), split between the first two consonants.
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3. If the word ends in le:
- When the letter before the le is a consonant (C+le), divide the word before that consonant.
- If the letter before the le is a vowel, keep them together.
- If the letters before the le form the digraph /ck/, divide the word after the /ck/.
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4. If the word is composed of compound nouns, split it between the two nouns.
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5. In words that have one middle consonant (VCV):
- If the vowel has a long sound, divide the word before the consonant
- If the vowel has a short sound, divide the word after the consonant
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6. In words with two vowels that make two sounds (CVVC), split between the two vowels.
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7. If a word has three or four consonants between vowels (VCCCV), split it after the first consonant (but keep digraphs and blends together).
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8. The letter Y in the middle or at the end of words works as a vowel. Split before the consonant before the Y.
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9. The silent Magic E is not counted as a vowel in a syllable.
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10. Keep the Following Together:
- Consonant Digraphs: two consonants that combine to make one sound (e.g. th, ph, ch)
- Consonant Blends: two consonants that are next to each other, with each consonant making its own sound (e.g. pl, fr, sm)
- Vowel Teams: two vowels that combine to make one sound (e.g. ai, ee, oa)
- Vowel Blends: two vowel sounds that are combined into one syllable; they start as one vowel sound and glide toward another, producing a single gliding sound (e.g. oi, au, ow)
- R-controlled Vowels: the r silences the sound of the vowel before it; the vowel does not make its short or long sound, but makes a new r-controlled sound ( e.g. ar, er, ir)
- A silent E with the closest vowel
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