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Parent Guide - Double Vowels

The document discusses the double vowel rule where the first vowel makes the sound and the second is silent, using examples like pain, rain, and meat to demonstrate how to apply the rule.

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Brittany Willig
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
98 views1 page

Parent Guide - Double Vowels

The document discusses the double vowel rule where the first vowel makes the sound and the second is silent, using examples like pain, rain, and meat to demonstrate how to apply the rule.

Uploaded by

Brittany Willig
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as XLS, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

SORT EXAMPLE

This week we will be talking about words that have double vowels. The rule is when 2 vowels go walking the first one does the talking. This means that we say ONLY the first vowel sound in the word. The vowel sound will ALWAYS be a long vowel when we there are two vowels together. For example, in the word pain we only hear the long a sound. the "i" sound is silent. Here is a link to a video we will be using in class that teaches the Double Vowel Rule. Of course there are special cases when this rule does not work; however, most of the time this English rule works great :)

Long train brain say rain

Long meat leaf seat

Long tie lie

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