onset
What is what comes before the vowel in a syllable?
The number of phonemes in "paper."
What is 4?
The number of graphemes in "brought"
What is 4?
This is an example of a morpheme.
What is (s, ing, etc.)?
If we are using these words: rabbit, picnic, napkin, bandit, we are probably teaching this pattern.
What is VCCV division pattern?
Phoneme
What is the smallest unit of sound in a language?
the difference between /t/ and /d/
What is voice?
What is VCe?
This is a morpheme that can only come at the beginning of words.
What is (pre, un, re, dis...)?
We might teach phoneme segmentation by using this technique.
What is say it and move it? Or what is Elkonin boxes?
What is the written representation of a phoneme?
What is phonemic awareness?
This is the reason we double the consonant in the word "spinning."
What is to keep the vowel short/to keep the first syllable closed?
The number of morphemes in transportation.
What is 3? (trans, port, tion) a is a connector for Latin-based words.
This is what students need to know about vowel digraphs.
What is when two vowels go walking?
Morpheme
What is the smallest unit of meaning in a language?
What is (segmentation, blending, deletion, manipulation)?
The word "little" has these two types of syllables.
What are closed and Cle?
What is 1?
These are the steps of "what says?"
What are teacher says a sound, student echoes, student says letter name, student writes letter?
Syllable
What is a vowel sound that may/not be surrounded by consonants?
a word that has the same vowel sound as "cue"
What is (few, use, etc.)?
What is Anglo-Saxon?
the difference between a bound and an unbound morpheme
What is a unbound morpheme can stand on its own (e.g. table, chair, pen); a bound morpheme needs to be attached to another morpheme (e.g. re, dis, cyc)?
These are the steps of SOS spelling.
What are listen, say, spell sounds on fingers, spell letters on fingers, right, read?