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Learn to sound out short words letter by letter and read them all by yourself!
A long, long time ago, people did not have books. They told stories out loud! Then people made up letters to write words down. Each letter stands for a sound. When you put those sounds together, you make a word. That is called decoding. It means you figure out a word by looking at the letters and saying the sounds.
Let's look at how reading grew over time.
Here is the big question: How do you look at a word you have never seen before and read it? The answer is decoding. You look at each letter, say its sound, and blend the sounds together!
Every word is made of letters. Every letter makes a sound. There are two kinds of letters: consonants and vowels. Knowing them is the first step to decoding words!
Let's look at how to decode the word "dog." We break it into sounds, then blend them together. Look at the picture below!
See? You looked at the three letters: d, o, and g. You said each sound. Then you blended them together and got the word "dog!" The pink letter o is the vowel. The blue letters are consonants.
This works for lots of short words. A word with just one beat (one syllable) like "dog," "cat," or "sun" can be decoded this way. You just go left to right, sound by sound!
There is a simple pattern for decoding one-syllable words. Most short words follow this shape: a consonant, then a vowel, then another consonant. We call this a CVC word. CVC stands for Consonant-Vowel-Consonant.
Here are the three steps you follow every time:
Not all words have just three letters. Some have two letters, like "up" (just a vowel and a consonant). Some have four letters, like "stop" (two consonants, then a vowel, then a consonant). The steps are the same: say each sound, then blend.
Many short words share the same ending. We call these word families. If you can read one word in a family, you can read them all! You just change the first consonant.
Word families are like shortcuts! Once you know the ending -at, you can read cat, bat, hat, mat, rat, sat, fat, and pat just by changing the first letter. That is a lot of words from one ending!
| Word Family | Ending Sound | Example Words |
|---|---|---|
| -at | /ăt/ | cat, bat, hat, mat, sat, rat |
| -ig | /ĭg/ | big, pig, dig, fig, wig, jig |
| -op | /ŏp/ | hop, top, mop, pop, stop |
| -un | /ŭn/ | sun, fun, run, bun, gun |
| -et | /ĕt/ | pet, net, wet, set, get, jet |
Here is a word with four letters. Let's decode it together, step by step.
Decoding works really well for regularly spelled words. That means the letters make the sounds you expect. But some words are tricky! Let's look at what works and what to watch out for.
| ✓ WHAT WORKS WELL | ✗ WATCH OUT FOR |
|---|---|
| Short CVC words like "cat," "dog," "sun" | Tricky words like "the" and "was" don't follow the rules |
| Words with blends like "frog," "stop," "jump" | Some letters can make two sounds (like "c" in "cat" vs. "city") |
| Word families help you read lots of words fast | Long words with many syllables need a different trick |
| Going left to right, sound by sound, always works for regular words | Silent letters (like the "k" in "know") can confuse you |
Right now you are learning to read one-syllable words — words with just one beat. But soon you will learn even more exciting things!
| WHAT YOU KNOW NOW | WHAT YOU WILL LEARN NEXT |
|---|---|
| Short vowel sounds (ă, ĕ, ĭ, ŏ, ŭ) | Long vowel sounds (ā, ē, ī, ō, ū) — the vowel says its name! |
| One-syllable words (cat, dog, sun) | Two-syllable words (kitten, rabbit, sunset) |
| Single consonant sounds (b, c, d...) | Digraphs — two letters that make one sound (sh, ch, th) |
| Regular words that follow the rules | Irregular words that you learn by sight (the, said, was) |
Every word you decode now makes you a stronger reader. Keep practicing, and soon you will be reading whole sentences and stories all by yourself!
Try these problems on your own. Sound out each word slowly. When you are ready, click "Show Answer" to check!
Today you learned how to decode regularly spelled one-syllable words. That means you can look at a short word, say the sound for each letter, and blend those sounds together to read the word. You learned that every word has vowels (a, e, i, o, u) and consonants (all the other letters). In short words, vowels usually make their short sounds, like /ă/ in "cat" or /ŏ/ in "dog."
You discovered that many words belong to word families — groups of words with the same ending. If you can read "cat," you can also read "bat," "hat," "mat," and more! You practiced the three big steps: look at each letter, say its sound, and blend them together. Keep using these steps every time you see a new word. You are becoming a reader! 📚⭐