Five if a diphthong is one phoneme, but six if it's two:
/fəʊniːm/
There are two phonemes in the word "phoneme." The "ph" sound represents one phoneme (/f/) and the "oneme" part represents another (/oʊ/).
Yes, phonemes is the plural of phoneme.
The word "shoelace" consists of three phonemes: /sh/ /oo/ /lace/.
There are three phonemes, or speech sounds, in the word 'voice', as the letter blend of oi forms one phoneme, or speech sound, and the blend of ce forms a single phoneme also. The phonemes are v / oi / ce
The word "cake" has three phonemes: /k/ /eɪ/ /k/. Each sound represents a different phoneme in English.
There are three phonemes in the word "this": /θ/, /ɪ/, /s/.
Yes, phonemes is the plural of phoneme.
2 phonemes
The word "shoelace" consists of three phonemes: /sh/ /oo/ /lace/.
Just one phoneme. So a word like "hair" would be 2 phonemes.
There are three phonemes, or speech sounds, in the word 'voice', as the letter blend of oi forms one phoneme, or speech sound, and the blend of ce forms a single phoneme also. The phonemes are v / oi / ce
There are three phonemes in the word "this": /θ/, /ɪ/, /s/.
No, "a" is not a phoneme on its own. In English, "a" is typically a grapheme representing the vowel sound /ə/ or /eɪ/, but it is not a distinct phoneme in the phonemic inventory of English. Phonemes are the smallest units of sound that can change the meaning of a word in a given language.
There are 4 phonemes in the word "space" (/s/ /p/ /eɪ/ /s/).
In the word "study," there are four phonemes: /s/, /t/, /ʌ/, and /d/.
Four; each letter has its own phoneme.
The word "cat" has three phonemes: /k/, /æ/, and /t/.
There are three phonemes in the word 'ring', because the consonant blend of 'ng' forms a single phoneme, or speech sound. The phonemes are r / i / ng.