1 / 34

DIPHTHONGS

DIPHTHONGS. What are diphthongs?. A combination of two vowel sounds. Sounds which consist of a movement or glide from one vowel to another. There are eight diphthongs in English language. ɪ ( both British and American). e.

Download Presentation

DIPHTHONGS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. DIPHTHONGS What are diphthongs?

  2. A combination of two vowel sounds. • Sounds which consist of a movement or glide from one vowel to another.

  3. There are eight diphthongs in English language

  4. ɪ (both British and American) e • Move from open, front vowel sound to half open, central vowel sound.

  5. Peer • Fierce • Tears • Beard • Deer

  6. She enjoys the respect of her peers. • There is a herd of red deer on the mountain. • Her daughter is very dear to her. • Are you a beer drinker? • The child was shaking with fear. • She left the room in tears. • Are you clear about the arrangements for tomorrow.

  7. e(both British and American) e • Move from half open, front vowel sound to half open, central vowel sound.

  8. Aired • Pear • Bear • Care • Rare • Fair

  9. ʊ (both British and American) e • Move from close, back vowel sound to half open, central vowel sound.

  10. Poor • Tour • Tournament • pluralize

  11. The band is on tour in France. • The Sahara cup tournament was won by Australia. • The verb should be in plural in this sentence. • They were too poor to buy shoes for the kids. • Her eyes were cruel and hard.

  12. eɪ(both British and American) • Move from half open, front vowel sound to close, front vowel sound.

  13. They • Ray • Pain • Face • Race • Grace • trace

  14. I’m playing badminton with Mathew tomorrow. • The train is coming. • The aliens landed quietly. • I’ve made a shopping list. • Have you ever played cricket. • The plane has just landed. • We haven’t had a party for ages.

  15. aɪ(both British and American) • Move from open, back vowel sound to close, front vowel sound.

  16. Tide • Ride • Time • Nice • Rice • Slice • exercise

  17. My arms are aching terribly. • I really needs a rest. • I think you are right. • I like school. • A light was flaming. • I’ve just had an idea. • I’ve felt really tired for a whole week now.

  18. ɔɪ (both British and American) • Move from back, half open vowel sound to close, front vowel sound.

  19. Boy • Roy • Void • Voice • Noise • Joy • toy

  20. The boy enjoying playing with his toys. • The singers are annoyed by the noise in the audience. • The royal advisers were loyal. • She dropped the coins into the hole in the soil. • Don’t leave the oil to boil, please.

  21. ʊ (only British)oʊ (only American) e • Move from back, close vowel sound to half open, central vowel sound.

  22. Go • Home • Most • Ghost • Host

  23. Don’t phone before you go to the puppet show. • Were you home alone? • She said no when asked for a new stove. • He drove slowly because he was carrying a heavy load. • I suppose he goes up the road often.

  24. aʊ (both British and American) • Move from open, back vowel sound to close, back vowel sound.

  25. Loud • House • Mouse • Now • Out • Cow • sound

  26. The brown mouse found another house. • How many sounds can the machine make? • It sounds like the shower is still on. • She was not allowed to make noise. • Mother read a story about how they found the king’s crown.

More Related