
- •The Syllable. The Principles of Syllable Division. The nature of the syllable.
- •Syllable division rules for simple words and parts of compound words
- •The Primary and the Secondary Meaning of Letters.
- •Reading of vowels in stressed syllables
- •The Primary Sound Meanings of Vowels in Different Types of Syllables.
- •Test II
- •Reading of Stressed Vowels in Combination with Letter ”r”
- •Idioms, sayings:
- •Reading of Vowel Digraphs*
- •Principles of Reading Vowel Digraphs
- •Reading of digraphs “oo”, “ou” in homographes:
- •Vowel Letter Combinations
- •Reading of Unstressed Vowels.
- •Reading of Consonants
- •Reading of “c, g, j”
- •Reading of Endings -(e)s, -(e)d
- •Reading of combinations of vowels with consonants.
- •Mute Consonants
- •Reading of English Consonant Clusters
- •Reading of “ng, nk”
- •Reading of letter “n”
- •Revision and Consolidation Practice
- •I) Each word here has the sound [u:]. How many ways are there to spell this sound? Arrange the words into the groups:
- •Additional Practice in Reading and Memory Work
Idioms, sayings:
He that hath ears to hear, let him hear.
If the cap fits, wear it.
Here today, gone tomorrow.
Five fat friars frying fish.
While there is life there is hope.
No smoke without fire.
Real weird rear wheels.
First come, first served.
Even a worm will turn.
It is the early bird that catches the worm.
A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush.
One good turn deserves another.
A picture is worth a thousand words.
The calm before the storm.
To put the cart before the horse.
A barking dog seldom bites.
Don’t take your harp to the party.
A bird is known by its note, and a man by his talk.
Adversity makes the man wise, not rich.
Through hardship to the stars.
Return good for evil.
Better unborn than untaught.
You can bring your horse to the water but you can’t make it drink.
rhymes and twisters:
An old woman, old woman, shall we go a – shearing?
Speak a little louder, sir, - I am very hard of hearing.
Old woman, old woman, shall I love you dearly?
Thank you, kind sir, I hear you very clearly.
How many boards
Could the Mongols hoards
If the Mongol hoards got bored?
“What is this life if, full of care,
We have no time to stand and stare?”
I cannot bear to see a bear
Bear down upon a hare.
When bare of hair he strips the hare,
Right there I cry, “Forbear!”
Reading of Vowel Digraphs*
|
Aa |
Ee |
Ii |
Oo |
Uu |
Yy |
Aa |
|
[i:] formulae |
[eı] aid [aı] balalaika [æ] plaid [e] said
|
|
[α:] aunt [ɔ:] August [ɒ] sausage [əυ] aubergine |
[eı] way [e] says [ə] always [ı] Monday
|
Ee |
[i:] sea [eı] great [ıə] idea [e] bread |
[i:] need |
[i:] ceiling [eı] beige [aı] either [e] leisure |
[i:] people [ıə] theory [e] leopard |
[(j)u:] neutral [jυə] Europe |
[i:] key [ı] money [eı] they |
Ii |
[ə] Parliament [aıə] diamond |
[aı] tie [i:] achieve [ı] Freddie [e] friend |
|
[ıə] patriot [aıə] lion |
[aıə] triumph |
|
Oo |
[əυ] oak [ɔ:] broad
|
[u:] shoe |
[ɔI] boil [ə] tortoise [ı] connoisseur
|
[əυ] brooch [u:] food [υ] foot [Λ] blood |
[əυ] soul [u:] you [υ] could [aυ] thousand [Λ] courage [ɒ] cough [ɔ:] ought |
[ ı] loyal |
Uu |
|
[u:] true [υə] cruel |
[(j)u:] juice [ı] biscuit |
|
|
[aı] buy |
Yy |
[aıə] hyacinth |
[aı] bye |
|
[(j)əυ] yoga |
|
|