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Spelling Tips
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- The letter q is always written with u and we say, "kw." The letter u is not a vowel here. (quiet)
- /c/ before e, i, or y says, "s" (cent, city, cycle).
- /g/ before e, i, or y may say, "j" (gentle, get).
- Vowels a, e, o, u usually make the long sound at the end of a syllable (belong, protect, futile)
- Vowels i and y may sound like the long "i" at the end of a syllable, but usually sound like the long "e" (final and my as opposed to Indian and baby) [for spelling]
- Vowel y, not i, is used at the end of an English word (for example, my).
- There are five kinds of silent final e's. The first rule (as in time) is one of the three ways a vowel says its name.
- o-r may say, "er" when w comes before the o-r (for example, works).
- i is before e except after the letter c.
- s-h is used at the beginning of a word, at the end of a syllable but not at the beginning of any syllable after the first one, except for the ending, "ship." (shut, fish, nation)
- t-i, s-i and c-i are used to say "sh" at the beginning of any syllable after the first one. c-h says, "sh" in a word of French origin. (nation, session, special, chic)
- s-i is used to say, "sh" when the syllable before it ends in s (session) and when the base word has an s where the word changes. (tense/tension)
- Only s-i can say, "zh" except for t-i in "equation." (vision)
- When a one-syllable word ends with one short vowel and one consonant, double the final consonant before adding a vowel suffix. (hop, hopping/hopped)
- When a two-syllable word ends with a vowel and a consonant, double the final consonant when adding a vowel suffix, if the accent is on the last syllable. (admit, admitted, admitting)
- Silent final e words are written without the e when adding an ending beginning with a vowel. (have, having)
- We often double l, f, s, after a single vowel, at the end of a one-syllable word. (full, puff, pass)
- Vowels i and o are long when followed by two consonants. (find, bold, gift)
- s never follows x. (box, boxes)
- All is written with one l when added to another syllable.(almost, also)
- Till and full added to another syllable are written with one l. (until, fulfill)
- 3-letter "j" (dge) may be used after a single short vowels (badge,edge,ridge,lodge,fudge)
When adding an ending to a word that ends with y, that has a sound alone, change the y to i unless the ending is i-n-g. (fry,fried - cry,crying)
- 2-letter "k" (ck) may be used only after a single short vowels (pack,peck,pick,pock,puck)
- The letter z, never s is used to say, "z" at the beginning of a base word. (zero, zipper)
- The letters e-d say, "d" and "t" as the past tense ending of any base word which does not end in the sound, "d" or "t." When e-d says "ed" after words ending with "d" or "t," they form another syllable. (loved, wrapped) (word,word ed-part,parted)
- Double consonants within words of more than one syllable should both be sounded for spelling. (lit tle, but ton)
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