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Reading Champs Common Sense Mini-lesson # 026
TITLE: Syllabication: Structural Analysis # 6
Catalog Index: CSML-026
Price (USD): $6.95


Structural Analysis
Syllabication

We described affixes as sort of like a train. Then a contraction was described as a little like taking a car, or even a few cars, from the middle of the train to make it shorter, lighter, and faster. Well, now we are going to build a train (in this case, a word) one section at a time, and each section is made up of parts we call syllables.

A syllable is a part of a word. As a matter of fact, in some cases, a syllable is the word (like ‘A’, or ‘I’). But usually a syllable (word part) is made up of a vowel sound and one or more consonants. Then each word is made up of one or more syllables.

And once you have all of this information down pat, you also have another tool for figuring out the sounds of new and longer words. That tool is called ‘syllabication’, or simply breaking a word down into its smaller components.

Syllab  (truncated form for syllable)

+ ic (which means pertaining to … in this case, syllable) = syllabic.

+ ation (performing an action) = syllabication.

which is, in this case, breaking a word down into syllables.

Related Mini-lessons and Additional Reading on this subject.

CSML-022: Word Families
CSML-023: Compound Words
CSML-024: Roots, Prefixes, and Suffixes
CSML-025: Contractions
CSML-026: Syllabication
CSML-027: Plurals and Possessives

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Mini-lesson #026
Syllabication
Created by
Rita M. Wirtz, M.A.
Edited by
Donald E. Werve, Jr., M.Ed.
CSML-026LP
$6.95 (PB)
CSML-026 / 090615
Copyright 2007, 2008, 2009 -- Rita M. Wirtz, M.A. -- All Rights Reserved