Two consonants that blend together and lose their own individual sounds and create a new unique sound.
for example: ch, sh, th
chair, shape, though
A consonant digraph is two consonants that are placed together to make a single sound. Examples include "sh" in "ship" and "ch" in "chat".
A consonant digraph is a combination of two consonant letters that together represent a single sound. Examples include "th," "ch," and "sh." The letters in a digraph work together to create a unique sound that is different from the individual sounds of the letters.
A split digraph is when a vowel digraph is split by a consonant, such as the 'e' at the end of a word making the vowel say its name as in "time" or "hope." It occurs when an 'e' at the end of a word changes the short vowel sound to a long vowel sound.
It is called a consonant blend or a digraph A consonant blend is when two or more consonants appear together and you hear each sound that each consonant would normally make. -- As in fingerprint A digraph is when the two letters represent a single sound. -- As in fang If described according to it's point of articulation it is a velar nasal consonant
Two- or three-letter consonants, either beginning or ending, which make only one sound. These include th, wh, -ng, -nk, sh, ch, -tch, and qu.
A digraph is short for directed graph.
a slanted letter
The word "shark" obviously have no silent letters. There's a trick that the H might look like it's silent, but actually, the H is'nt silent because SH is a consonant digraph, which makes a deeper S sound. The single S makes a shallow S sound. The H in the consonant digraph is'nt really silent because the H is there to fuse together to make one new sound. If the H is'nt part of the consonant digraph, then the H is considered silent because the sound does'nt change, like for "rhino", the H is considered silent because RH is'nt a consonant digraph. Obviously, "shark" have no silent letters because SH is a consonant digraph.
It is called a consonant blend or a digraph A consonant blend is when two or more consonants appear together and you hear each sound that each consonant would normally make. -- As in fingerprint A digraph is when the two letters represent a single sound. -- As in fang If described according to it's point of articulation it is a velar nasal consonant
Two consonants that blend together and lose their own individual sounds and create a new unique sound. for example: ch, sh, th chair, shape, though
Two- or three-letter consonants, either beginning or ending, which make only one sound. These include th, wh, -ng, -nk, sh, ch, -tch, and qu.
A split digraph is when a vowel digraph is split by a consonant, such as the 'e' at the end of a word making the vowel say its name as in "time" or "hope." It occurs when an 'e' at the end of a word changes the short vowel sound to a long vowel sound.
A digraph is short for directed graph.
digraph
A consonant digraph is a combination of two consonant letters that together represent a single sound. Examples include "th," "ch," and "sh." The letters in a digraph work together to create a unique sound that is different from the individual sounds of the letters.
The word agreement has a schwa sound (uh), a GR digraph, a long E sound, an M sound, and another schwa sound in ENT (ehnt/unt).
In these words ephemeral pheromone the E following the PH has a short E sound (ih-fem-ur-ul). The word "phlegm" has an extra consonant, the L.
The word digraph is a noun. The plural form is digraphs.