Why don't you look at your question a little closer? I see two words that start with consonant blends. Instead of pronouncing the initial consonants separately, they are blended together. Try pronouncing them together and seeing how they sound.
An initial consonant blend occurs when 2 or 3 consonants are found together at the beginning of a word, and each one is sounded separately. For example:
Spring, blend, brown, travel, stroll, glad, scramble.
Do not confuse this with 2 consonants that together make a single sound, such as 'th', 'ch', 'sh'. These do not form a consonant blend.
A consonant blend is self-explanitory, it is a series of consanants that are pronounced all together, so 'shr' is a consonant blend, 'sion' is not a consonant blend.
20 words with consonant blend
No. It is a consonant diagraph.
example of consonant blends ending in sh
toag
yes
The I has a long I sound as in high, sigh, and sign. The GH is silent, so it is not a consonant blend.
Spend?
Two consonant blends, st and ng
pr and bl
wh
fly flies