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LETRS Unit 2 Exam Questions With correct Answers

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LETRS Unit 2 Exam Questions With correct Answers Advance phonemic awareness - ANSWER-Usually for second grade and beyond they can use deletion, substitution and reversal but must be accurate and automatic .Allophonic variations - ANSWER-Distortions by the sounds before of after the sound we want to hear .Alphabetic principal - ANSWER-Is the concept that a grapheme represents a phoneme. .Alphabetic Principle - ANSWER-The concept that phonemes are represented by letters and graphemes. .Basic Phonemic awareness - ANSWER-Usually for kindergarten and first grade they can segment words into sounds and blend them back together .Chop instead of shop - ANSWER-Student confused /sh/ for /ch/ because both sounds have the same position of tongue, teeth, and lips. .Consonant phonemes - ANSWER-Are speech sounds produced by obstructing the flow of air out of the speakers mouth. .Consonant Phonemes (sounds): Affricates - ANSWER-These can be considered chopped fricatives Because they combine features of stops with those of fricatives. Affricates are: /ch/ as in chin, /j/ as in jam, .Consonant Phonemes (sounds): Affricates - ANSWER-UNVOICED: Tongue pulled back on roof of mouth /ch/ as in chin VOICED: Tongue pulled back on roof of mouth /j/ as in jam .Consonant Phonemes (sounds): Fricatives - ANSWER-Fricatives are hissy sounds, because we use our tongue, lips, and teeth in such a way to construct the airflow.

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Uploaded on
August 31, 2024
Number of pages
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Written in
2024/2025
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Advance phonemic awareness - ANSWER-Usually for second grade and beyond they
can use deletion, substitution and reversal but must be accurate and automatic

.Allophonic variations - ANSWER-Distortions by the sounds before of after the sound
we want to hear

.Alphabetic principal - ANSWER-Is the concept that a grapheme represents a phoneme.

.Alphabetic Principle - ANSWER-The concept that phonemes are represented by letters
and graphemes.

.Basic Phonemic awareness - ANSWER-Usually for kindergarten and first grade they
can segment words into sounds and blend them back together

.Chop instead of shop - ANSWER-Student confused /sh/ for /ch/ because both sounds
have the same position of tongue, teeth, and lips.

.Consonant phonemes - ANSWER-Are speech sounds produced by obstructing the flow
of air out of the speakers mouth.

.Consonant Phonemes (sounds): Affricates - ANSWER-These can be considered
chopped fricatives Because they combine features of stops with those of fricatives.

Affricates are:

/ch/ as in chin, /j/ as in jam,

.Consonant Phonemes (sounds): Affricates - ANSWER-UNVOICED: Tongue pulled
back on roof of mouth

/ch/ as in chin


VOICED: Tongue pulled back on roof of mouth

/j/ as in jam

.Consonant Phonemes (sounds): Fricatives - ANSWER-Fricatives are hissy sounds,
because we use our tongue, lips, and teeth in such a way to construct the airflow.

, There is a lot of friction going on in fricatives.

.Consonant Phonemes (sounds): Fricatives - ANSWER-Fricatives are:

UNVOICED:

Teeth on lip: /f/ as in fish,

Tongue between teeth: /th/ as in thumb

Tongue on ridge behind teeth: /s/ as in son

Tongue pulled back on roof of mouth: /sh/ as in shoes

Glottis: /h/ as in hat


VOICED:

Tongue pulled back on roof of mouth: /zh/ as in genre

Tongue on ridge behind teeth: /z/ as in zebra

Tongue between teeth: /th (with line on bottom)/ as in feather

Teeth on lip: /v/ as in valentine

.Consonant Phonemes (sounds): Glides - ANSWER-Glides are always followed by a
vowel sound.

We call them glides because the consonant sound glides right into the vowel sound.

The three glide sounds are:

/wh/ as in wheel (/wh/),

/w/ as in window (/w/)

/y/ as in yo-yo

.Consonant Phonemes (sounds): Glides - ANSWER-Note that for /wh/ and /w/ some
linguistics focus on the tongue retraction to the back of the throat.

However the more obvious future is the rounding of the lips when articulating these
sounds.

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