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  1. 3rd Grade Reading
  2. Reading Irregularly Spelled Words

A B Csaidfriendknow
3RD GRADE ELA • READING FOUNDATIONAL SKILLS

Reading Irregularly Spelled Words

Learn to read tricky words that don't follow the usual spelling rules — and become a stronger reader!

Section 1

Why Do Tricky Words Exist?

Have you ever tried to sound out the word "said" and felt confused? You might expect it to rhyme with "paid," but it doesn't! That's because English is a language that grew over a very long time. Words came from many different places, and they kept their old spellings even when people started saying them differently.

Let's take a trip through time to see how this happened!

About 1,500 Years Ago
People in England spoke Old English. Many of our everyday words — like "was," "the," and "have" — come from this time. They were spelled the way they sounded back then.
About 1,000 Years Ago
Vikings and French speakers brought new words to English. Words like "people" and "beauty" joined the language with French spelling patterns.
About 600 Years Ago
Something called the Great Vowel Shift happened. People slowly changed how they said vowels, but nobody changed the spellings! This is why many words look different from how they sound.
About 500 Years Ago
The printing press was invented. Once books were printed, spellings got "locked in." Even though people kept changing how they talked, the spellings stayed the same.
Today
We still use many of those old spellings! That's why words like "friend," "could," and "does" are spelled in ways that don't match the sounds you hear.

So the big question is: How can you read words that don't follow the rules? That's exactly what this lesson will teach you!

Section 2

What Are Irregularly Spelled Words?

An irregularly spelled word is a word that has one or more parts that don't follow the usual phonics rules. When you try to "sound it out" letter by letter, it doesn't come out right. You have to remember these words by sight — that's why they're sometimes called sight words or tricky words.

1

Some Letters Are Silent

In words like "know" and "write," some letters don't make any sound at all. The "k" in "know" is silent!
2

Vowels Make Surprise Sounds

In "said," the "ai" sounds like a short "e" instead of a long "a." That's not what you'd expect!
3

Whole Parts Look Different

The word "once" starts with a "w" sound, but there's no "w" in the word! The "o" makes a "wuh" sound.
4

You Need to Remember Them

Since sounding out doesn't always work, you need to practice and memorize these words so you can read them quickly.
✦ ✦ Key Takeaway
Think of irregularly spelled words like people's names. If someone is named "Sean," you can't sound it out — you just have to learn that it's said "Shawn." Tricky English words work the same way. You learn them, remember them, and soon they feel easy!
Section 3

Word Map: Regular vs. Irregular

Let's look at a big picture that shows the difference between regular words (words that follow the rules) and irregular words (tricky words). In the diagram below, you can see how letters match up with sounds in each type of word.

REGULAR WORDLetters match their sounds ✓c a t/k//ă//t/Sounds like: "KAT" ✓Every letter makes thesound you expect.You CAN sound it out!More regular words:sit, map, fun, bedIRREGULAR WORDLetters DON'T match sounds ✗s a i d/s//ĕ/—/d/Sounds like: "SED" ✗"ai" says /ĕ/ not /ā/The "i" is basically silent!You must MEMORIZE it!More irregular words:was, friend, does
Regular words follow the rules. Irregular words have surprise sounds you need to remember.

In the diagram above, you can see that in the regular word "cat," each letter makes the sound you'd expect. But in the irregular word "said," the "ai" makes a short "e" sound instead of a long "a" sound. The dashed lines and red color show you the tricky part — that's the part you just have to remember!

Section 4

How to Read Tricky Words

When you see a word you don't know, here's a step-by-step plan you can use. This works for both regular and irregular words!

💡 Step-by-Step Strategy
Step 1: Look at the word. Do you already know it? If yes, read it! Step 2: Try to sound it out. Say each letter or letter group. Step 3: Does the word sound right? Does it make sense in the sentence? Step 4: If it doesn't sound right, it might be a tricky word! Look for a part you DO know. Step 5: Ask a grown-up or look it up. Then practice saying the word three times so you remember it.

Here's the cool part: most irregular words have some parts that follow the rules and just one tricky part. For example, in the word "friend," the "fr" and "nd" parts are regular — they sound just like you'd expect. The tricky part is the "ie" in the middle, which says /ĕ/ instead of /ē/.

Finding the Tricky Part
fr ie nd
Green = regular parts · Red = tricky part
✦ ✦ Key Takeaway
Think of a tricky word like a puzzle. Most of the pieces fit together just fine. There's only one piece that's a little different. Once you find that one tricky piece and remember it, the whole puzzle is solved!
Section 5

Families of Tricky Words

Tricky words often come in families — groups of words that share the same surprising pattern. Learning one word can help you read others in the same family! Let's explore some common families.

TRICKY WORD FAMILIES🤫 SILENT LETTER FAMILYA letter is there but makes no soundknowsilent kwritesilent wcombsilent bislandsilent shoursilent hkneesilent k😮 SURPRISE VOWEL FAMILYVowels make an unexpected soundsaidai → /ĕ/doesoe → /ŭ/friendie → /ĕ/goneo → /aw/loveo → /ŭ/busyu → /ĭ/🌀 THE "OUGH" FAMILYSame letters, different sounds!throughough → /oo/thoughough → /ō/roughough → /ŭf/thoughtough → /aw/Same spelling, four different sounds!🎭 WHOLE WORD SURPRISESThe whole word is tricky!once"wunce"two"too"one"wun"eye"I"were"wur"people"pee-pul"These words are big surprises!
Tricky words come in families. Learning one word can help you read others like it!

Notice how the Silent Letter Family has words where a letter is hiding and makes no sound. The Surprise Vowel Family has vowels that make different sounds than you'd expect. The "ough" Family is especially wild — the same four letters can say four completely different things! And the Whole Word Surprises are words where almost everything is tricky.

How Tricky Are They? A Difficulty Scale
A little tricky
Medium tricky
Very tricky
A little tricky (one silent letter)Very tricky (whole word surprise!)
Section 6

Worked Example: Reading a Tricky Word

Let's practice reading the word "could" step by step, just like a detective solving a case!

Reading the Word "could"

Step 1 — Look at the Word

You see the word: could. Do you already know it? If not, let's figure it out!

Step 2 — Try to Sound It Out

You might try: "c-oh-ul-d" or "cold". Hmm, those don't sound like real words you've heard. Something is off!

Step 3 — Find the Tricky Part

Let's break it apart: c + oul + d. The "c" says /k/ and the "d" says /d/ — those are normal! But the "oul" in the middle is the tricky part. The "l" is silent, and the "ou" says /ʊ/ (like the "oo" in "book").

Step 4 — Put It Together

So the word is: /k/ + /ʊ/ + /d/ = "cud" — that's how we say "could"! It rhymes with "wood" and "good."
/k/ + /ʊ/ + /d/ = "could"

Step 5 — Check It in a Sentence

"I could ride my bike to the park." Does that make sense? Yes! You did it!

Step 6 — Learn the Family

Now you know that "could" has a silent "l." Guess what? "Would" and "should" work the same way! You just learned three words at once! 🎉
Section 7

Regular Words vs. Irregular Words

Let's put regular and irregular words side by side so you can see the difference clearly. This table shows words you'll see often in 3rd grade reading.

Regular WordWhy It's RegularIrregular WordWhy It's Irregular
petEvery letter sounds like you'd expectpeopleThe "eo" makes a surprise sound
handYou can sound it outhaveThe "a" says /ă/ even though the "e" at the end usually makes the "a" long
pinShort i sounds like you'd thinkgiveThe "i" stays short even with the magic "e"
riceThe "magic e" makes "i" say its nameliveThe "i" stays short — no "magic e" power here!
rain"ai" says long a, just like the rulesaid"ai" says short e — that's a surprise!
mudShort u in the middleput"u" says /ʊ/ (like in "book"), not /ŭ/
✦ ✦ Key Takeaway
Regular words are like following a recipe — each step goes the way you expect. Irregular words are like a recipe where someone changed one ingredient. The dish is still delicious, but you need to taste it to know what it is! The more you practice reading tricky words, the faster you'll recognize them — just like knowing your favorite foods by how they look.
Section 8

Growing Into a Stronger Reader

Right now, you're learning to recognize tricky words one at a time. As you grow as a reader, something amazing will happen: you'll start to see patterns even in the tricky words! Here's a peek at what's coming next.

What You're Learning NowWhat Comes Next
Memorizing individual tricky wordsSpotting patterns across groups of words
Finding the "tricky part" of a wordUnderstanding why the word is spelled that way (word history!)
Reading words like "could," "would," "should"Reading longer words with tricky parts, like "knowledge" or "thoughtful"
Using a word in a sentence to check if it's rightUsing word parts (prefixes, roots, suffixes) to figure out new words

The cool thing is that every tricky word you learn now makes it easier to learn the next one. Your brain starts to build a big library of word patterns. Before you know it, you'll be reading words you've never even seen before — because you've trained your brain to look for clues!

Section 9

Practice Problems

Time to practice! Try each question on your own before looking at the answer. You've got this!

PROBLEM 1 — WHAT DO YOU KNOW?
What makes a word "irregularly spelled"? Pick the best answer: (A) It is a very long word. (B) It has one or more parts that don't follow the usual phonics rules. (C) It starts with a vowel. (D) It is hard to write in cursive.
PROBLEM 2 — FIND THE TRICKY PART
Look at the word know. Which part of this word is irregular (tricky)? (A) The "ow" part (B) The "k" at the beginning (C) The whole word is tricky (D) The "n" in the middle
PROBLEM 3 — WORD FAMILIES
The words "could," "would," and "should" all have the same tricky part. What do they have in common?
PROBLEM 4 — USE IT IN A STORY
Read this sentence and figure out the underlined tricky word: "My friend and I built a castle out of blocks." If you tried to sound out "friend" using regular phonics rules, what would it sound like? What does it actually sound like?
PROBLEM 5 — THINK LIKE A TEACHER
Imagine you're helping a younger student learn to read. They see the word "people" and they try to say "pee-oh-pull." What would you tell them? How would you help them remember the right way to say it?
Summary

Lesson Review

Irregularly spelled words are words that have parts that don't follow the usual phonics rules. English has so many of these because our language grew over hundreds and hundreds of years, borrowing words from other languages and keeping old spellings even after people changed how they talked. Some tricky words have silent letters (like the "k" in "know"), some have vowels that make surprise sounds (like the "ai" in "said"), and some are completely surprising (like "once" sounding like "wunce").

The best way to read these words is to look for the tricky part, remember it, and practice. You can also learn words in families — "could," "would," and "should" all share the same silent "l" pattern. Every time you learn a new tricky word, you become a stronger and faster reader. Keep practicing, and soon these words won't feel tricky at all — they'll feel like old friends!

Varsity Tutors • 3rd Grade English Language Arts (Common Core) • Reading Irregularly Spelled Words