English Vowel Sounds
Sound |
||||||||||||
/i/ | leak | keen | peat | beet | bee | |||||||
/I/ | lick | lit | kin | pit | bit | |||||||
/ey/ | lake | late | cane | bait | bay | |||||||
/e/ | let | Ken | pet | bet | ||||||||
“ae” | lack | can | pat | bet | baa | |||||||
“ah” | lock | con | pot | bought | bah | |||||||
“uh” | luck | putt | but | |||||||||
“oo” | look | put | ||||||||||
/u/ | Luke | lute | coon | boot | boo | |||||||
“er” | lurk | Kern | pert | Bert | burr | |||||||
/o/ | cone | boat | Bo, bow | |||||||||
/ai/ | like | kine | bite | by | ||||||||
/au/ | lout | pout | bout | bough | ||||||||
/oi/ | coin | boy |
Some Generalizations (Not Rules) about English vowels and spelling
English vowels have “long” and “short” forms.
The long form is the “name” of the letter: The short form is as follows:
A
E I O U |
/ey/
/i/ /ai/ /o/ or /ou/ /u/ or /yu/ |
a
e i o u |
“ae”
/e/ /I/ “ah” “uh” |
Long vowels are usually (but not always) indicated by a second (silent) vowel in the same syllable:
sheep | bait | heat | loaf | like | mice | tune | peace | juice | hoe | leave |
jay | slow | pony | (Sometimes “y” and “w” can function as a second vowel.) |
Short vowels usually stand alone within a syllable and are often followed by “double” consonants:
ran | jet | cup | doll | kiss | tick | lamb | witch | fast | hint | punch |
Note the difference:
hope
hop |
hoped
hopped |
hoping
hopping |
- tiny/tinny
Notable exceptions:
head
light read |
give
sign live |
gone
find lead |
(sound is “short” despite silent second vowel)
(sound is “long” despite no silent second vowel) (two pronunciations: long or short) |