We need a few more vowel sounds.
I've already introduced six 'short vowels' (a, e, i, o, u, u)
and five 'long vowels' (ae, ee, iy, oe, uu) - that's 11.
But we need more if we want to make the right sounds in English.
I've already introduced six 'short vowels' (a, e, i, o, u, u)
and five 'long vowels' (ae, ee, iy, oe, uu) - that's 11.
But we need more if we want to make the right sounds in English.
I think we need 6 more.
So let's go!
We are going to call the next two vowel sounds the “Cowboys”.
In English, both sounds are related to the letter 'o', so both of our symbols will also be related to the letter 'o'.
They are ŏ and oy.
Cowboy #1: ŏ
ŏ is the vowel sound in cow. It even looks like a cow! (Kind of.)
There are two standard ways of spelling this sound: ´ou` and ´ow`. You can think of the ŏ as being an ´o` with a little ´u` or ´w` above it.
So the ŏ in ´cow` and ´vowel` is the same as the ŏ in ´loud` and ´sound`.
If you see a word you don`t know with ´ow` or ´ou` in it, think ŏ !
There are lots of words that don´t follow this rule - for example, ´know` (no) - we will call them ´non-standard` spelling. The system we're learning here tells us how to read and pronounce the regular or ´standard` spelling patterns.
In English, both sounds are related to the letter 'o', so both of our symbols will also be related to the letter 'o'.
They are ŏ and oy.
Cowboy #1: ŏ
ŏ is the vowel sound in cow. It even looks like a cow! (Kind of.)
There are two standard ways of spelling this sound: ´ou` and ´ow`. You can think of the ŏ as being an ´o` with a little ´u` or ´w` above it.
So the ŏ in ´cow` and ´vowel` is the same as the ŏ in ´loud` and ´sound`.
If you see a word you don`t know with ´ow` or ´ou` in it, think ŏ !
There are lots of words that don´t follow this rule - for example, ´know` (no) - we will call them ´non-standard` spelling. The system we're learning here tells us how to read and pronounce the regular or ´standard` spelling patterns.
Note that in Romance languages (and in phonetics), the ŏ is related to the combination ´au`, which is responsible for lots of pronunciation mistakes in English.
Cowboy #2: oy
oy is the vowel sound in ´boy` - boy
There are two standard ways of spelling this sound: ´oi` and ´oy`.
So the oy in ´boy` is the same sound as the oy in ´coin`.
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Next: Vowel Sounds 4: The R-vowels
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