"So" is a vowel pair, as it contains both a vowel and a consonant. "oa" together make the long "o" sound.
A vowel digraph is two vowels that are written together in a word, but only one sound is produced. Examples include "ai" in "rain" and "ee" in "tree".
The word "your" contains a vowel pair (ou) rather than a vowel digraph. Vowel pairs are two adjacent vowels that each make their own distinct sound, while digraphs are two letters that make a single sound.
The EE pair has a long E vowel sound. The final E has a schwa sound.
Yes. The AI pair has a long A vowel sound.
The EE pair in sleet has a long E vowel sound, as in sleek and feet.
A vowel digraph is two vowels that are written together in a word, but only one sound is produced. Examples include "ai" in "rain" and "ee" in "tree".
The word "your" contains a vowel pair (ou) rather than a vowel digraph. Vowel pairs are two adjacent vowels that each make their own distinct sound, while digraphs are two letters that make a single sound.
No. The OA pair has a long O vowel sound as in coat.
The EE pair has a long E vowel sound. The final E has a schwa sound.
The EI vowel pair has a long A sound in seine (sounds like sane).
Yes. The AI pair has a long A vowel sound.
nothing
The EA pair has a long E vowel sound (meen).
The EA pair has a long E vowel sound, as in reach and leak.
No, both the AA pair and the lone A are short vowel sounds (arr).
The EE pair in sleet has a long E vowel sound, as in sleek and feet.
The AI pair has a long A (ay) vowel sound.