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Some letters don't always make the same sound โ let's learn to read those tricky words!
Have you ever tried to sound out a word and it just didn't work? You followed the rules, but the word still sounded funny. That's because English borrowed words from many different languages. Each language had its own way of spelling and saying things. When English took those words, it kept the old spellings โ even when they didn't match English sounds!
Let's look at how this happened over time.
So the big question is: How do we read words that don't follow the usual rules? That's what this lesson will teach you!
Before we look at tricky words, let's learn some big ideas. These will help you understand why some letters make different sounds in different words.
Let's look at a picture that shows how the letters "ea" can make different sounds in different words. This is one of the trickiest patterns in English!
Look at this picture! The letters "ea" are in the middle. They show up in lots of words. But they make three different sounds! In "eat," they say the long E sound. In "bread," they say the short E sound. And in "great," they say the long A sound! That's why we call them inconsistent โ the same letters don't always make the same sound.
When you see a word you don't know, here is a plan to help you figure it out. Think of these as your superpowers for reading tricky words!
Here is another big picture that shows some of the most common tricky patterns and the different sounds they can make.
Look at the picture above. The letters "ow" can say /ow/ like when you say "ouch!" โ that's the sound in "cow" and "how." But "ow" can also say /ล/ โ the long O sound โ like in "snow" and "grow." Same letters, different sounds! When you see "ow" in a new word, try both sounds and see which one makes a real word.
Let's look at more tricky spelling patterns. These are letters that can make more than one sound. You will see these in your reading all the time!
| Letter Pattern | Sound 1 | Sound 2 |
|---|---|---|
oo | Long /oo/ โ moon, food, zoo | Short /oo/ โ book, look, good |
ea | Long /ฤ/ โ eat, sea, clean | Short /ฤ/ โ bread, head, dead |
ow | /ow/ โ cow, how, now | Long /ล/ โ snow, grow, blow |
ou | /ow/ โ out, house, loud | /oo/ โ you, soup, group |
ey | Long /ฤ/ โ key, monkey, donkey | Long /ฤ/ โ they, hey, grey |
And here are some whole words that are very common but very tricky. You just have to remember them because sounding them out won't always help!
| Tricky Word | Sounds Like |
|---|---|
| said | sounds like "sed" |
| was | sounds like "wuz" |
| come | sounds like "kum" |
| love | sounds like "luv" |
| done | sounds like "dun" |
| give | sounds like "giv" |
| have | sounds like "hav" |
| gone | sounds like "gawn" |
Let's pretend you are reading a book and you see this sentence:
Knowing about tricky words is a superpower, but it helps to know what works well and what can be confusing. Let's compare helpful tips with common traps readers fall into.
| Helpful Tips โ | Common Traps โ |
|---|---|
| Try the most common sound first, then switch if it doesn't work. | Only trying one sound and giving up if it doesn't work. |
| Use the sentence to help. Does the word make sense in the story? | Ignoring the sentence and just guessing without thinking. |
| Practice tricky words often so they become easy. | Thinking you can always "sound out" every word โ some words need to be memorized! |
| Group words that share the same tricky pattern (like "head," "bread," "dead"). | Thinking that if "ea" says short E in "head," it always says short E. |
Right now, you are learning to spot tricky words and try different sounds. As you grow as a reader, you'll learn even more cool things!
| What You Know Now | What You'll Learn Later |
|---|---|
| The letters "ea" can make different sounds. | You'll learn word origins โ words from French, Latin, and Greek follow different patterns! |
| You try different sounds until the word makes sense. | You'll learn prefixes and suffixes โ little word parts that give you clues about meaning and sound. |
| Some words just need to be memorized. | You'll learn spelling rules that explain WHY some words are spelled the way they are. |
Every tricky word you learn now makes you a stronger reader for the future. You are building a big library of words in your brain! ๐
Let's see what you've learned! Try each problem. Click "Show Answer" when you're ready to check.
Today you learned that some spelling patterns in English are inconsistent โ that means the same letters can make different sounds in different words. You learned that this happens because English borrowed words from many languages over hundreds of years. The letters "ea" can say long E (like "eat"), short E (like "bread"), or even long A (like "great"). The letters "ow" can say /ow/ (like "cow") or long O (like "snow"). And the letters "oo" can say a long sound (like "moon") or a shorter sound (like "book").
You also learned a reading strategy: See it, Try it, Check it, Know it! When you come to a tricky word, try the most common sound first. If it doesn't work, try a different sound. Use the sentence to help you figure out which sound is right. And remember โ some very common words like "said," "was," "come," and "love" just need to be memorized because they are so tricky. The more you read, the better you'll get at spotting these words. You are becoming a stronger reader every day! โญ๐