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School-wide Terms for Word Study The following terms are words or phrases students are familiar with from Fundations in K-2. It would be beneficial to your students and yourself to use these terms when revisiting Fundations concepts or teaching new word study skills. The following definitions are the ones students are taught in Level 1 and/or Level 2 of Fundations. The example words/sounds are ones that students should be able to sound out in reading or writing by the end of Level 2 Fundations. (Unless denoted with an *) Consonant: a letter whose sound is made by stopping the air passing through your mouth. Vowel: a letter whose sound is made by letting air continuously pass through your mouth. Digraph: two consonants that come together to make a new sound. They cannot be separated when dividing a word into syllables. [Fundations Digraphs: sh, th, wh, ch, ck] Blend: two or three (a group of consecutive consonants) when in a word you hear all the sounds. Initial blends are at the beginning of a word and final blends are the end. [Example Fundations Initial Blends: tr-, st-, bl-, dr-, sk-] [Example Fundations Final Blends: -mp, -st, -sk, -nt, ] Digraph Blend: consonant + digraph [Example Digraph Blends: lunch, catch] Glued Sounds: (also referred to as welded sounds in Wilson®) group of two or three letters that work together to make a sound. Glued sounds consist of a vowel and one or two consonants. Glued sounds do end with blends, but Fundations teaches those blends as being attached to a vowel and contributing to the collective sound. [Fundations Glued Sounds: ank/ang, ink/ing, onk/ong, unk/ung, am, an, all] Bonus Letters: the letters f, l, s, and sometimes z are doubled when at the end of a closed syllable word, following a short vowel sound. [Example Words w/ BONUS LETTERS: kiss, hill, puff, buzz, hall] Base word: the main part of a word, with all affixes removed. Fundations does not consistently refer to base words as root words. [Example Base Words: jumping, looked, pinkish, books, remove, deconstruct] Suffix: letters or group of letters added to a base word that changes the meaning. (Suffixes and prefixes are both referred to as affixes in linguistics but not Fundations.) [Fundations Suffixes: -s -es -ed (ed, d, t) -ing -est -er -ish -able -en -ive -y -ful -ment -ness -less -ly -ty] Compound Words: words made up of two or more smaller words. (Students are only taught single word compound words, those without a hyphen.) [Example Compound words: bookbag, homework, rainbow, shoelace] Syllable: a word or word part made by one push of breath. (Students learn 6 syllable types and 2 exceptions. The six syllable names students should be aware of are: closed, open, vowel-consonant-silent e, r-controlled, vowel team, -le controlled.) [Example words divided into syllables: o-pen, fan-tas-tic, mar-ble, pan-cake, ro-bot] Vowel Team: vowel teams are two vowels that work together to make a new sound. (Vowel teams can be divided into diphthongs and vowel digraphs but those two terms are not referred to in Fundations.) [Example words w/ Vowel Teams: team, boat, seed, coin, blew*, crayon, tailor] (The letter w is treated as a vowel in Fundations when learning vowel teams.) Homophone: words that have the same sound but different spellings and meanings. [Example Homophones: main/mane, pale/pail, tow/toe] Dictionary: a book that tells you the spelling of a word (The Fundations dictionary in the level 2 student notebook does not give definitions of words. This section of the notebook is used for spelling options. ) Keywords: words students can use to remember sounds. (Analogy words)