English
English
Single Vowels One simple, steady vowel sound. cat, sit, hot
(Monophthongs)
Consonant Sounds Sounds made by blocking air with lips, bat, dog, cat
teeth, tongue, etc.
Consonant Clusters Two or more consonants together with no street, plant, crisp
vowel between them.
Schwa (/ə/) The most common sound in English, weak about, banana,
and unstressed "uh" sound. problem
R-Controlled Vowels Vowel sound followed and controlled by "r." car, bird, turn
Silent Letters Letters written but not pronounced. knife (k silent), doubt
(b silent)
Short vowel (VC or cat, bed, pin, hop, If a vowel is followed by one consonant, it’s
CVC pattern) cup usually short.
Long vowel (VCE cake, theme, If a vowel is followed by one consonant and a
pattern - Silent 'e') bike, hope, cute silent 'e', the vowel says its name.
Vowel Teams (two boat, beat, rain, "When two vowels go walking, the first one
vowels together) food, pie does the talking" — the first vowel is usually
long.
R-controlled vowels car, bird, form, The 'r' changes the vowel sound: car = /ɑr/, bird
(vowel + r) turn = /ɜr/.
Open syllable (vowel he, go, me, hi A vowel at the end of a syllable is usually long.
at end)
Schwa sound about, pencil, Unstressed vowels often become a soft /ə/
(unstressed vowels) supply sound (the "schwa").
1 Basics Learn short vs long vowels (a, e, i, o, u). Watch a YouTube video
explaining it.
2 Short A /æ/ Practice words like "cat", "map", "bad". Listen, repeat, record.
3 Short E /ɛ/ Practice words like "bed", "red", "pen". Minimal pairs with /æ/.
4 Short I /ɪ/ Practice words like "sit", "hit", "fit". Minimal pairs with /ɛ/.
5 Short O /ɒ/ Practice words like "cot", "pot", "lot". Compare with /ɑː/ if needed.
8 Long A /eɪ/ Practice "cake", "late", "make". Learn the silent 'e' rule.
9 Long E /iː/ Practice "me", "be", "see", "free". Minimal pairs with /ɪ/.
12 Long U /juː/ Practice "cute", "few", "music". Practice slow, clear speech.
13 Review Shadow 1 paragraph from a native speaker audiobook. Focus on
long vowels.
14 Schwa /ə/ Learn the schwa sound. Practice words like "banana", "problem",
"family".
18 Vowel Teams Study vowel combinations: ai, ea, oa, ee. Examples: "rain",
"bread", "road".
20 Rhythm Focus Pick a simple English song (slow) and sing along focusing on
vowel sounds.
21 Review Choose 10 sentences with difficult vowels, read them loudly, and
record.
23 Linking Vowels Practice how words link in speech: "go on" sounds like "go-won".
24 Stress in Words Practice word stress: "record" (noun vs verb). Hear how vowel
sounds change.
25 IPA Basics Spend 20 minutes studying IPA vowel symbols for English.
26 Accent Focus Choose a specific accent (General American or British RP). Watch
a video analyzing it.
29 Free Talk Talk about your day for 2 minutes recording yourself. Focus on
Challenge vowels.
🎉
30 Final Test Record reading a story (like "The Cat and the Hat"). Compare with
Day 1. Celebrate progress!
4. English Diphthong Cheat Sheet
📚 What are diphthongs?
● Two vowel sounds smoothly combined into one syllable.
● Your mouth moves from the first vowel to the second.
● They sound like a glide!
❗
● Open syllable (ends in vowel) → usually long: he, go, me
○ Exception: Some Latin-based words like rigid, rapid, vivid keep short
vowels, even though the first syllable is open.
🔀 Diphthongs
● Sound like vowel "glides" — two sounds in one: boy, time, loud
❗
● Pronunciation can vary slightly by accent (e.g., UK vs US)
○ Be careful with regional differences: tour may sound like one vowel in some
accents.
🤐 Schwa (/ə/)
● Most common English vowel sound.
● Happens in unstressed syllables, no matter the spelling.
❗
○ Examples: about, banana, pencil
○ Never stressed — often overlooked by learners.
🗣️ Word Stress
● Nouns vs Verbs: REcord (noun) vs reCORD (verb)
● Words ending in:
○ ic, -sion, -tion → stress the syllable before
❗
○ al, -ty, -cy, -gy → usually stress third-from-last
● Some exceptions exist, especially in foreign/borrowed words.
🔇 Silent Letters
● Not all letters are pronounced — trust your ears, not just spelling!
❗
○ Examples: knife (k), doubt (b), write (w)
○ These must be memorized — no pronunciation rule fixes them.
✅ Tip: English has rules, but also many exceptions — especially in pronunciation.
Don’t try to memorize everything at once. Focus on patterns, listen a lot, and imitate real
speech.
📄✨
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