The word "shape" has four phonemes: /ʃ/ (the "sh" sound), /eɪ/ (the "ay" sound), /p/ (the "p" sound), and /s/ (the "s" sound).
In English, a phoneme is the smallest unit of sound that distinguishes one word from another. Each phoneme represents a distinct sound or group of sounds that are perceived as a single sound by native speakers of the language.
There are three phonemes in the word "judge": /dʒ/, /ʌ/, /dʒ/.
There are 10 phonemes in the word "persistent."
There are eight phonemes in the word "hippopotamus."
The word "Christina" has 7 phonemes.
There are 10 phonemes in the word "instruction."
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Phonemes are speech sounds, and in the word "it" there are just two phonemes - i / t.
There are three phonemes in the word "judge": /dʒ/, /ʌ/, /dʒ/.
There are 10 phonemes in the word "instruction."
There are eight phonemes in the word "hippopotamus."
The word "Christina" has 7 phonemes.
The word "at" has two phonemes: /æ/ and /t/.
There are nine phonemes in the word "splattered."
There are 6 phonemes in the word "explain."
There are 5 phonemes in the word "philosophy."
There are four phonemes in the word "star."
There are six phonemes in the word "explain."