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Learn how to push sounds together to say whole words β even tricky ones with consonant blends!
When you were a baby, you learned words by hearing them over and over. Now you are bigger! You can learn to build words yourself. How? By pushing tiny sounds together. Each little sound is called a phoneme. When you blend phonemes, they turn into a word you can say out loud.
People have been teaching kids to blend sounds for a very long time. Let's look at some fun moments in history!
The big question is: How do I take separate sounds and push them together to say a real word? That is exactly what this lesson is about!
Before we start blending, let's learn four important ideas. These ideas are like building blocks that help everything else make sense.
Look at the picture below. It shows how the word "frog" is made from four tiny sounds. Each sound gets its own colored box. When you push them all together, you get the whole word!
Did you see the consonant blend in "frog"? The sounds /f/ and /r/ sit right next to each other at the start. You say them both fast β "fr" β before the vowel /Ε/. That's what makes it a blend!
Here is the secret to blending any word. Follow these three easy steps and you can say any word!
When a word has a consonant blend, you do the same thing. But two consonant sounds stick together like best friends. In the word "snap," you blend /s/ and /n/ together first, then add /a/ and /p/.
Notice how /s/ and /n/ became a team β "sn" β in Step 2. That's the consonant blend! You still hear both sounds, but they move very fast together.
There are many consonant blends. Some come at the beginning of a word and some come at the end. Here is a chart to help you see them!
| Blend | Where? | Example Word | Sounds |
|---|---|---|---|
| bl | Beginning | block | /b/ /l/ /Ε/ /k/ |
| cl | Beginning | clap | /k/ /l/ /a/ /p/ |
| fr | Beginning | frog | /f/ /r/ /Ε/ /g/ |
| gr | Beginning | grin | /g/ /r/ /Δ/ /n/ |
| st | Beginning | stop | /s/ /t/ /Ε/ /p/ |
| sn | Beginning | snap | /s/ /n/ /a/ /p/ |
| tr | Beginning | trip | /t/ /r/ /Δ/ /p/ |
| nd | End | hand | /h/ /a/ /n/ /d/ |
| nk | End | sink | /s/ /Δ/ /n/ /k/ |
| st | End | fast | /f/ /a/ /s/ /t/ |
Don't worry if the tricky ones are hard at first. The more you practice, the easier they get!
Let's try the word "clap." Follow each step with me!
Blending is a superpower, but sometimes it can be a little tricky. Here are some tips to help you and some traps to watch out for!
| β DO THIS | β WATCH OUT! |
|---|---|
| Say each sound clearly before you blend. | Don't add extra sounds! /s/ is not "suh." |
| Start slow, then go faster. | Don't rush β speed comes with practice! |
| In a blend, say BOTH sounds. "st" is /s/ then /t/. | Don't skip one sound in a blend. "Stop" is NOT "sop." |
| Use your finger to point at each sound. | Don't stop between sounds too long or the word falls apart. |
| Check: Does my word make sense? | If the word sounds funny, try again more slowly. |
Right now you are learning to blend single-syllable words. That means words with just one beat, like "frog" or "snap." But soon you'll be ready for even bigger words!
| What You Know Now | What's Coming Next |
|---|---|
| Blend 3 sounds: /c/ /a/ /t/ β "cat" | Blend 2-syllable words: "sunset" = "sun" + "set" |
| Blend consonant blends: /s/ /t/ /o/ /p/ β "stop" | Blend words with digraphs: "sh," "ch," "th" |
| Blend words out loud | Use blending to READ words in books! |
Every time you blend a word, your brain gets stronger at reading. The more you practice now, the faster you'll read later. You're building the most important reading skill there is!
Try these five problems. Say each word out loud! When you're ready, click "Show Answer" to check.
Today you learned that a phoneme is the smallest sound in a word, and blending means pushing those sounds together to say a whole word out loud. You practiced the three steps: stretch it out slowly, speed it up, and snap it together into one word.
You also learned about consonant blends β that's when two consonant sounds sit next to each other and you hear both of them, like the "st" in "stop" or the "gr" in "grab." Blends can be at the beginning or end of a word. Remember: blending is like a smoothie β push all the sounds in, mix them up, and out comes a whole word! Keep practicing and you'll be reading like a superstar! π