English, asked by josephdiya999, 3 months ago

1 point
Every syllable having vowel sound helps us in syllabification.
True
False

Answers

Answered by sanjanakumari54
3

Every syllable having vowel sound helps us in syllabification.

True

Answered by soniatiwari214
0

Answer:

The answer to this question is true.

Explanation:

Every syllable of each word must have a minimum of one phone. A vowel can stand alone in a very syllable, as in u•nit and an•i•mal. It can even be surrounded by consonants, as in jet, nap•kin, and fan•tas•tic. Vowels can make different sounds. The sounds they create rely upon where they're in a very word. This helps determine if the vowel makes its short or long sound: go vs. got, she vs. shed, hi vs. him.

When there’s only 1 vowel in a very syllable and it's followed by a minimum of one consonant, the vowel usually makes its short sound. Examples include on, itch, mas•cot, and Wis•con•sin. This pattern is termed a “closed syllable” because the consonant “closes in” the short phone.

When there's only 1 vowel and it's at the tip of a syllable, the vowel makes its long sound, as in he and ban•jo. This pattern is named an “open syllable.”

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