Word Endings & Phonemes
Vowel Teams & Diagraphs
Morphemes: dic/dict, gen/gener, duc/duct
Spelling & Meaning
Application & Context
100

 Give a word that ends with -stle and pronounce the consonant(s) that become silent.

castle- silent t

100

 Identify the vowel team in "phone" and say its phoneme.

"ph" digraph pronounced /f/.

100

Give a base meaning for the root "dict" and provide one simple derivative used in daily life.

"dict" = speak; "predict" or "dictionary".)

100

Provide the correct spelling for the word that means "to speak briefly and forcefully" using the "dict" root.

"dictate" or "edict" depending on prompt; likely "dictate".

100

Provide a quick decoding strategy students should use when they see "ph" in an unknown word.

Recognize "ph" represents /f/ and decode accordingly; think of common roots like "photo-"

200

Spell and read a one-syllable word with the -age ending that means "a place where something is done."

 "garage" — note syllable stress and pronunciation.

200

Spell a word with the vowel team "ui" that means "a small, thin piece" and use it in a sentence.

"sliver" doesn't contain ui; instead use "ruin" (but meaning differs). 

"fruit" contains "ui" pronounced /fruːt/; sentence provided.)

200

Provide the meaning of "gen" (or "gener") and give two examples 

"gen" = birth, kind, origin; "generation" = group of people born around same time; "generate" = to produce.

200

Choose the correct spelling: "occurence" or "occurrence."

"occurrence." Doubling rule for final consonant when stressed and short vowel before it.

200

Identify the morpheme in "generation" and explain how it helps infer the meaning of the whole word.

"gener" = birth/origin, so "generation" relates to people born around same time.

300

Identify the correct pronunciation difference between "listen" and a word ending in -stle like "whistle"; explain which consonant is silent in each.

In "listen" the "t" is often reduced; in "whistle" the "t" is silent—"wis-sel" /ˈwɪsəl/.

300

 Distinguish between the pronunciations of "ur" in "burn" and "ue" in "blue." Provide example words for each and note vowel quality.

 "ur" = /ɜːr/ as in "burn"; "ue" = /uː/ as in "blue".

300

 "duc/duct," give a word where the root changes form and explain the meaning change. 

(e.g., "conduct" vs "product")

"conduct" = lead/guide behavior; "product" = something led forth — result; explanation.

300

Identify and correct the misspelled word in this sentence: "He recieved a suprise from his friend." Provide rule reminders for each correction. 

"received" and "surprise." Rule: 'i before e except after c' and 'surprise' unstressed syllable.

300

Revise this sentence for correct morpheme usage and spelling — "The conductor produced a nice producton of the play."

"The conductor produced a nice production of the play." 


added 'i' and correct spelling

400

Provide two multisyllabic words ending in -age and mark the syllable stress; use each in a sentence

"courage" (COUR-age), 

"village" (VIL-lage)

400

Provide a 3-syllable word containing "ie" that follows common OG decoding rules; mark syllables and decode aloud.

"provided example such as 'socie-ty' is not appropriate; use "belief" is two-syllable. 

"dietary" (di-e-ta-ry) contains "ie" as /aɪ.ə/; syllable marking and decoding shown.

400

Analyze the word "dictionary" by breaking into morphemes, giving literal meanings of each morpheme, and using it in an evidence-based sentence about word meaning.

"dict" (speak/word) + -ion + -ary (relating to) → relating to words; sentence.

400

Provide a short morphological analysis (prefix/root/suffix) for "misdirection" and define.

mis- (wrong) + direct (lead) + -ion (noun) → the act of leading wrongly.

400

Underline and explain:  "ui," "ur," "ue," and "au," 

"The musician tuned the flute while the audience applauded. The curious jury waited."

"The musician tuned the flute while the audience applauded. The curious jury waited." Underline: "tuned" (ue), "flute" (ue), "applauded" (au), "curious" (ur), "jury" (ur/ie?).

500

Explain orthographic rules for adding suffixes to root words that end with -stle (e.g., making plurals or adding -ing) and give two correct examples.

For most -stle words, retain the -stle and add suffixes: "whistles," "whistling."

500

Explain how "au" and "aw" can represent the same vowel sound; give three contrastive word pairs showing spelling with the same phoneme.

"autumn"/"lawn" (different contexts); "author"/"dawn"; "cause"/"claw".  

500

Given the sentence: "The general decided to abrogate the directive after reviewing evidence," identify the morphemes gen/gener and dic/dict in root words, explain their contributions to meaning, and suggest one synonym for "abrogate" suitable in context.

"general" includes "gener" (born/race? here 'general' from generalis = whole), "directive" includes "dict" (to say/command).

500

insert the correct -age

"The ancient ______ sat at the center of the village."

"village"     "villige"     "vilage."

"village"    

500

CHALLENGE: Write one or two sentences using one -stle word, one -age word, and one root from dic/dict.

example: 

I looked up from the dictionary when I heard the teacher whistle because it was time to stop working on the practice passage. 

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