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A. F'a't
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B. W'i'n
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C. None of these
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D. C'u'be
Explanation
The vowel in "cube" (represented by 'u') is a long vowel because it is pronounced as /juː/ (like the 'u' in "flute").
In F'a't and W'i'n, the vowels are short vowels.
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A. None of these
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B. Watch
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C. Dish
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D. Schedule
Explanation
A trigraph is a group of three letters representing a single sound (phoneme).
In "Watch", the letters "tch" form a trigraph, producing a single /ʧ/ sound.
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A. 6
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B. 4
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C. 3
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D. None of these
Explanation
The word "carpenter" has three syllables: car-pen-ter.
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A. Metaphor
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B. Syllable
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C. Intonation
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D. Simile
Explanation
Intonation refers to the variation in pitch while speaking, which conveys emotions and meaning.
It helps distinguish between statements, questions, and expressions of different feelings.
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A. None of these
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B. Book-Pen
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C. Bat-Bed
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D. Tug-Bug
Explanation
Words gave the same ending sounds are called Rhyming words.
Example: One – Won, Tug and Bug.
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A. None of these
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B. Trigraph
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C. Digraph
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D. Homophones
Explanation
Homophones means words that sound the same but have different meanings and spellings.
Examples:
Knew New
Ad Add
Flew Flu
Mail Male
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A. Accepts
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B. None of these
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C. Strong
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D. Pulps
Explanation
A consonant cluster is a group of two or more consonants appearing together at the beginning of a word.
"Strong" has the initial consonant cluster "str-".
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A. Personification
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B. Imagery
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C. Alliteration
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D. None of these
Explanation
- Alliteration is the repetition of the same consonant sound at the beginning of closely placed words.
- In "Clary closed her cluttered clothes closet," the repetition of the 'C' sound makes it an example of alliteration.
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A. Post-alveolar
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B. Velar
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C. None of these
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D. Alveolar
Explanation
- Velar sounds are produced by raising the back of the tongue towards the soft palate (velum).
- Examples include the sounds /k/ and /g/ in words like "cat" and "go."
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A. None of these
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B. Triphthongs
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C. Semi-vowels
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D. Diphthongs
Explanation
- Diphthongs are vowel sounds that begin with one vowel position and smoothly transition to another within the same syllable (e.g., "coin," "loud").
- They differ from monophthongs, which have a single, unchanging vowel sound.
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