The word "extra" has 4 phonemes: /Ιͺ/ /k/ /s/ /t/.
6
The word "around" contains four phoneme sounds: /ΙΛraΚnd/.
3
There are two phonemes in the word "phoneme." The "ph" sound represents one phoneme (/f/) and the "oneme" part represents another (/oΚ/).
The word "crow" has three phonemes: /k/, /r/, and /oΚ/.
The word "spoke" has four phonemes: /s/, /p/, /oΚ/, /k/.
2 phonemes
no. phoneme is the smallest unit in a sound in a word.
/s/
Just one phoneme. So a word like "hair" would be 2 phonemes.
It depends on the language. In some languages, such as English and Spanish, "r" can be a separate phoneme with different pronunciations. In other languages, it can be part of a consonant cluster or pronounced differently depending on its position in a word.
3
4
The word "queen" has four phonemes: /kw/, /iy/, /n/.
phonate, phone, telephone, phoneme, phonetics, phonograph, phoney
Perhaps it has been spelt, rightly or wrongly, according to the pattern of light, night, right etc, which probably did have an extra sound (phoneme) in them. This phoneme has now disappeared from the pronunciation of these words but it originally represented a consonant similar to ch [as in loch]. Delight probably has a quite different etymology to the other gh words.
Yes, phonemes is the plural of phoneme.
No, a phoneme is not meaningless. Phonemes are the smallest units of sound that can distinguish meaning in language. Changing a phoneme can change the meaning of a word, so they play a crucial role in language communication.