[ Ai ] Aa; ar; ea; ough; au; augh; al;ear
Cast the last nasty card.
Far from eyes far from heart.
It’s enough to make a cat laugh.
My father is in the garden.
Can’t you ask Father or Aunt Margaret?
Half heart is no heart.
I can't. I can't laugh. I can't laugh and dance. I can't laugh and dance in grass. I can't laugh and dance in grass in my aunt`s garden after dark.
He laughs best who laughs last.
The highest art is artlessness.
Staff today and starve tomorrow.
If you laugh before breakfast, you’ll cry before supper.
A barking dog seldom bites.
My heart’s in the Highlands.
My heart is not here.
The dogs bark but the caravan goes on.
This is a dog,
He growls as a frog,
His name is Mark,
He likes to bark.
Consonants
[ b ] Bb
He brings the book of his father.
She brought the book from the library.
A baby-bear in a bubble bath.
A big bunch of blue balloons.
Betty Botter bought some butter,
But she said “The butter’s bitter,
And a bit of better butter
Will make my butter better“.
A bitter biting bittern bit a better brother bittern, and the bitter better bittern bit the bitter biter back. And the bitter bittern, bitten, by the better bitten bittern, Said: "I'm a bitter biter bit, black!
A big black bug bit the big black bear,
A big black bear bit a big black bug.
To buy a pig in the pocket.
A barking dog seldom bites.
[ k ] Kk; ck; Cc
Ask Kate to take the cake.
Take the ticket to Tokyo.
A kitten in the kitchen.
A cat curled up on a cosy couch.
Counting candles on a cake.
To carry coals to Newcastle.
[ g ] Gg
He gives a big glass to the girl.
A goose playing the golden guitar.
He was glad to see the girl.
A goat gobbling grapes.
Three grey geese in a green field grazing.
Grey were the geese and green was the grazing.
A good dog deserves a good bone.
[ m ] Mm
Mike's mother is coming tomorrow.
You’ve made the same mistakes.
Miss, miss, little Miss, miss.
When she messes, she misses like this.
[ n ] Nn
They haven’t noticed many mistakes
Never mind.
No news is good news.
Neither rhyme nor reason.
[z] Ss Zz
We used these scissors for cutting.
The farmers raised a big crop of maize.
[ʃ] sh
He wished for English book.
I shall buy the shirt in a shop.
[s] Ss
She sells sea-shells on a sea-shores
The shells that she sells
Are sea-shells, I’m sure.
Of all the smells I ever smelt,
I never smelt a smell that smelt
Like that smell I smelt smelled.
Sally Swim saw Sadie Slee
Slowly, sadly swinging.
I scream,
You scream,
We all scream
For ice-cream.
Swam ,swam over the sea,
Swim, swam, swim;
Swam back again,
Well swim, swam.
[z] Zz
They took usual measures.
The vision was a real pleasure.
[dʒ] Jj; Gg
Jack enjoyed the joke very much.
Jane and George took much pleasure in learning German.
Just a joke.
John put the orange juice into the fridge.
A journalist made a journey over Japan.
Julius was jealous.
[t] Tt Th
Charles fetched the chair for his teacher.
Most Scotch children like cheese.
Don’t touch those peaches in the kitchen.
Why did the teacher ask such a question?
Don’t troubles trouble until trouble troubles you because it doubles troubles and troubles the others too.
Thomas missed the last train to town.
Tony had little time left.
When a twister twisting would twist him a twist;
For twisting a twist three twists he will twist;
But if one of the twists untwists from the twist,
The twist untwisting untwists the twists.
Take caré of the pence and the pounds will take care of themselves.
[d] Dd
Did you see lad in the garden?
Suddenly he dared dawn the road.
[L] Ll
Little Nell likes to tell tales.
All’s well that ends well.
Look, listen, learn.
[ʒ] ong; ing
He was singing a nice English song.
To know everything is to know nothing.
A good beginning makes a good ending.
Better die standing than live kneeling.
The proof of the pudding is in the eating.
Spades for hearing, teeth for biting,
Eyes for seeing, legs for walking,
Tongues for tasting and for talking
My Bonnie
My bonnie is over the ocean,
My bonnie is over the sea,
My bonny is over the ocean,
Oh, bring back my bonnie to me.
Bring back, bring back,
Bring back my bonnie to me, to me.
Bring back, bring back,
Oh, bring back my bonnie to me.
Oh, blow, winds over the ocean,
Oh, blow, ye, winds over the sea,
Oh, blow, ye, winds over the ocean,
And bring back my bonnie to me.
Last night as I lay on my pillow
Last night as I lay on my bed
Last night as I lay on my pillow
I dreamed that my bonnie was dead.
The winds have blown over the ocean,
The winds have blown over the sea,
The winds have blown over the ocean
And brought back my bonnie to me.
Brought back, brought back,
Brought back my bonnie to me, to me.
Brought back, brought back,
Oh brought back my bonnie to me.
[r] Rr; wr
Mary reads a very rare romance.
Robert reads books regularly.
Two wrongs don’t make right.
All roads lead to Rome.
Neither rhyme nor reason.
We gathered ripe red raspberries along the river road.
Robert Rowley rouned a round roll round
A round roll Robert Rowley rolled round,
Where rolled the round roll Robert Rowley rolled round?
[Q] Th
Think over your theme.
The path leads through the thick forest.
The teacher thought and thought and thought and no one knew the thought he thought.
Wealth is nothing without health.
Thomas thinks of terrible thing.
I thought a thought but the thought I thought
I thought wasn't the thought I thought I thought.
Theophilus Thistle, the successful thistle-sifter,
Sifted sixty thistles through the thick of his thumb.
Thick thistle sticks.
Six thick thistles stuck together.
To go through thick and thin.
Thirty days has September,
April, June and November
All the rest have thirty one,
February has twenty-eight alone,
Excepting leap year, that’s the time,
When February’s days are twenty nine.
[Q] Th
His father breathes heavily.
My father and brother help each other.
These are three brothers, these are their father and mother, this is their other brother.
We gathered ripe red raspberries along the river road.
[s] Ss; Cc
Sandy plays chess best of all.
He used to sing a nice song.
A sailor went to sea to see
What he could see;
What he could see;
Was the bottom of the deep sea.
[p] Pp
Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled pepper,
A peck of pickled pepper Peter Piper picked;
If Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled pepper.
Where’s a peck of pickled pepper Peter Piper picked?
Take care of the pence and the pounds will take care of themselves.
