Difference between revisions of "When two vowels go walking, the first one does the talking"
From Teflpedia
(→The first one does the talking: italics) |
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==The rule doesn't work== | ==The rule doesn't work== | ||
− | *"au" /ɔː/ | + | *"au" |
+ | :/ɔː/ cause - author | ||
+ | :/eɪ/ gauge | ||
*"oo" | *"oo" | ||
:/uː/ school - goose | :/uː/ school - goose |
Revision as of 17:06, 25 August 2016
"When two vowels go walking, the first one does the talking" is a rule used when teaching English-speaking children that says that when there are two vowels in a word the first one has the so-called "long" sound of the vowel (or alphabet name), and the second one is not pronounced.
For example, in train the a has the so-called “long a” sound and i does not sound. The same happens for each, die, goat, and rescue.
Unfortunately, this rule is false 60% of the time.[1] Counterexamples: pause, head, chief, out, biscuit.
The first one does the talking
æ | ɑː | |
trap | father - start | |
e | eɪ | eə |
dress | face | square |
ɪ | iː | ɪə |
kit | fleece | near |
ɒ | əʊ | ɔː |
lot | goat | taught |
ʊ | uː | ʊə |
foot | goose | mature |
juː | jʊə | |
cute | cure | |
ʌ | ə | ɜː |
strut | comma | nurse |
aɪ | aʊ | ɔɪ |
price | mouth | choice |
- "ai" /eɪ/: Adelaide, afraid, aid, aim, available, brain, campaign, chain, claim, complain, contain, daily, detail, entertain, explain, fail, faith, gain, hail, Haiti, jail, mail, main, Maine, maintain, paid, pain, paint, rail, rain, raise, remain, retail, snail, Spain, stain, straight, train, trait, wait
- Exception: said
- "ee" /iː/: agree - between - deep - degree - fee - feed - feel - free - green - indeed - keep - meet - need - screen - see - seek - seem - sleep - speech - speed - street - tree - week
- "oa" /əʊ/: approach, boat, coach, coal, coat, coast, float, foam, goal, goat, load, loan, oats, road, roast, throat, toast
- "oe" /əʊ/: goes - heroes - potatoes - toe - tomatoes
- Exceptions: shoe - does (verb) - canoe
- "ue" /(j)uː/: blue - clue - continue - due - value
Mixed results
- "ea"
- /iː/: beach - bead - beat - bleach - breathe - cheat - clean - cream - creature - deal - dream - each - easy - eat - feature - heal - heat - increase - jeans - lead (verb) - leader - leaf - lean - leave - meal - mean - meat - pea - peach - peak - please - reach - read - repeat - reason - reveal - scream - sea - seal - seat - steal - steam - stream - teach - team - treat - weak
- /e/: ahead - already - bread - breakfast - breast - breath - cleanse - dead - deaf - dealt - death - dread - dreadful - feather - head - header - health - heather - heavy - instead - jealous - lead (metal) - leapt - leather - meadow - meant - measure - pheasant - pleasant - pleasure - read (past tense and past participle) - ready - spread - steady - sweat - thread - threat - threaten - treachery - tread - treadmill - treasure - wealth - weapon - weather
- /eɪ/: break - great - steak
- "ei"
- /iː/: ceiling - conceive - receipt
- /eɪ/: eight - neighbour - weigh
- "eo"
- /iː/: people
- /e/: leopard
- Both vowels do the talking: video - theory
- "ie"
- /aɪ/: lies - fried
- /iː/: chief - field
- "ui"
- /(j)uː/: bruise - fruit - suite
- /ɪ/: biscuit - circuit
- /uːɪ/: altruism - fluid - ruin - suicide
- /wɪ/: anguish - liquid - penguin - quick
The rule doesn't work
- "au"
- /ɔː/ cause - author
- /eɪ/ gauge
- "oo"
- /uː/ school - goose
- /ʊ/: foot - good
- "ou" /aʊ/: about - mouth
- Exceptions: soup - through; could - should - would; country - double
- Rule works for soul, but it is better to teach "ou" as a phonogram,[1] and therefore soul is an exception.
Both vowels do the talking
With a little imagination, instead of exceptions the following patterns are examples of rules for diphthongs.
See also
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 All about Learning Press, When Two Vowels Go Walking