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Types of Syllables

Types of Syllables. There are six types of syllables. A closed syllable ends in a consonant. There is only one vowel and it is “closed” with a consonant. It has a short vowel sound. cat. pet. 2. An open syllable ends in a vowel. The vowel has a long vowel sound. . go. a- pron.

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Types of Syllables

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  1. Types of Syllables

  2. There are six types of syllables.

  3. A closed syllableends in a consonant. There is only one vowel and it is “closed” with a consonant. It has a short vowel sound. cat pet

  4. 2. An open syllableends in a vowel. The vowel has a long vowel sound. go a-pron

  5. 3. A vowel-consonant-e or silent esyllableis when the final e is silent and makes the vowel before it long. name hope

  6. 4. A vowel team syllablehas two vowels next to each other that together say a new sound. This includes both vowel talkers and vowel whiners. sail ouch

  7. 5. Acontrolled r syllablecontains a vowel followed by the letter r. The r controls the vowel and changes the way it is pronounced. sort car

  8. 6. A consonant-lesyllable is has a consonant followed by the letters le. apple title • Also called Final Stable Syllables and can include words that end in al and el. • Examples: local, medal, chapel • Other final stable syllables include: sion, tion, ture, age, cious. • Examples: tension, nation, creature, engage, spacious

  9. The Six Syllable Types Are: closed syllable open syllable silent e syllable vowel team syllable controlled r syllable consonant le syllable

  10. Let’s practice!

  11. Name the syllable type: farm after r controlled syllables bird short turn

  12. Name the syllable type: cat pet closed syllable sit cop cub

  13. Name the syllable type: came Pete silent e site cope cube

  14. Name the syllable type: sail dream vowel team fruit crawl toy

  15. Name the syllable type: go me open syllable see three he

  16. Name the syllable type: apple title consonant – le syllables puzzle little middle

  17. Now that we know the six syllable types, they can help us read and spell unknown words.

  18. Dividing Words Into Syllables There are four ways to split up a word into its syllables: 1. 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, . The only exceptions are the consonant digraphs. Never split up consonant digraphs as they really represent only one sound. 2. Usually divide before a single middle consonant. When there is only one middle consonant, you usually divide in front of it. For example: "o-pen", "i-tem", "e-vil", and "re-port". 3. Divide before the consonant before an "-le" syllable. For example: a-ble, ti-tle, 4. Divide off any compound words, prefixes, and suffixes which have vowel sounds. sail-boat, un-paid, teach-ing,

  19. Spot and Dot Find the syllabication in multisyllable words Spot and dot the vowels. Connect the dots. Look under the line. How many consonants do you see? If there are two consonants, divide between them. If there is only one consonant, divide before it. If this doesn’t sound right, try after it. . . trumpet trum-pet . . o-pen open . . X river ri-ver riv-er

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