Opening subject page...
Loading your content
Learn how the same vowel letter can make two different sounds — and how to tell them apart!
Did you know that people have been reading and writing for thousands of years? Long ago, people figured out that some sounds are extra special. These special sounds are called vowels. Every single word you say has at least one vowel sound in it. Let's travel through time to see how people learned about vowels!
Here is the big question this lesson will help you answer: How can I tell if a vowel in a word makes its long sound or its short sound?
Before we start reading words, let's learn four important ideas. These are the rules that will help you every time you see a new word.
Let's look at a big picture that shows how short vowel words and long vowel words are built. Pay attention to the letters in each word.
Look at the left side. The words can, hit, and hop each have three letters: a consonant, then a vowel, then another consonant. This is called the CVC pattern. In CVC words, the vowel makes its short sound.
Now look at the right side. When we add a silent e to the end, the words become cane, hide, and hope. The vowel changes to its long sound — it says its own name! This is the CVCe pattern (also called "magic e").
When you see a one-syllable word (a word with just one beat), you can use the spelling to figure out if the vowel is short or long. Here are the two main patterns.
Here is a simple trick: when a vowel is stuck between consonants with no e at the end, it's short. When there's a silent e at the end, the vowel is long!
Let's look at each vowel one at a time. Say the words out loud so you can hear the difference!
Notice how each vowel has two sounds. The short sound is the quick one, and the long sound is just the letter's name. Try saying them out loud: "ă" is a quick sound (like in "hat"), but "ā" is the name of the letter A (like in "cake").
| Vowel | Short Sound | Short Word | Long Sound | Long Word |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | /ă/ as in "apple" | map, fan, bat | /ā/ says "ay" | make, game, name |
| E | /ĕ/ as in "egg" | hen, red, wet | /ē/ says "ee" | these, Pete, eve |
| I | /ĭ/ as in "itch" | pig, sit, win | /ī/ says "eye" | bike, time, line |
| O | /ŏ/ as in "octopus" | hot, mop, log | /ō/ says "oh" | home, nose, bone |
| U | /ŭ/ as in "umbrella" | bug, run, sun | /ū/ says "you" | cute, mule, tube |
Here is how you figure out if a vowel is long or short when you see a new word. Let's try the word "pine".
Now let's try a short vowel word: "pin".
See the difference? pin has a short i, but pine has a long i. Just one little silent e changes the whole sound!
Let's put lots of word pairs next to each other. Each pair shows how adding a silent e changes the vowel sound from short to long.
| Short Vowel Word | Long Vowel Word | What Changed? |
|---|---|---|
| cap (short a) | cape (long a) | Added silent e → a says "ay" |
| tap (short a) | tape (long a) | Added silent e → a says "ay" |
| pet (short e) | Pete (long e) | Added silent e → e says "ee" |
| bit (short i) | bite (long i) | Added silent e → i says "eye" |
| rob (short o) | robe (long o) | Added silent e → o says "oh" |
| cub (short u) | cube (long u) | Added silent e → u says "you" |
| tub (short u) | tube (long u) | Added silent e → u says "you" |
This pattern works most of the time! Sometimes English has tricky words that don't follow the rules (like "have" or "give"), but for most one-syllable words, the CVC and CVCe patterns work great.
You are learning about the CVC and CVCe patterns right now. As you keep reading, you will discover that there are more ways to make long vowel sounds! Here is a sneak peek at what you'll learn next.
| What You Know Now | What You'll Learn Soon |
|---|---|
| Silent e makes the vowel long (cake, bike) | Two vowels together can also make long sounds (rain, boat, meat) |
| CVC = short vowel (cat, bed) | Open syllables end with a long vowel (he, go, me) |
| One-syllable words only | Words with two or more syllables use these same patterns! |
The good news is that the patterns you are learning today — CVC for short vowels and CVCe for long vowels — are the building blocks for everything that comes next. Once you master these, reading bigger words will feel so much easier!
Let's practice what you learned! Try each problem, then click the button to see the answer. You can do it!
Every word has at least one vowel — and the five vowel letters are A, E, I, O, U. Each vowel can make two sounds: a short sound (quick and small, like the a in "cat") or a long sound (the vowel says its own name, like the a in "cake"). When you see a one-syllable word with a consonant-vowel-consonant pattern (CVC), the vowel is usually short. When you see a word that ends in a silent e after the consonant (CVCe), the vowel is usually long.
Remember the trick: the silent e at the end of a word is like a magic switch — it doesn't make a sound itself, but it turns the vowel's short sound into a long sound. This works for all five vowels! Now you can read pairs like cap/cape, bit/bite, hop/hope, and many more. Keep practicing, and you'll get faster every day!