Rules of reading letter (E e)

🔹 1. Short E — /ɛ/ (like in “red”)

  • Occurs in closed syllables (ends in a consonant).
  • Common spelling: e

Examples:

  • red
  • pen
  • bed
  • men

🔹 2. Long E — /iː/ (like in “me”)

Occurs when:

  • “E” is followed by a silent ‘e’ at the end of the word (magic ‘e’ rule).
  • There are double “ee”, or “ea” spelling patterns.
  • Also found in some open syllables (ends in a vowel).

Examples:

  • me, she, these
  • see, tree, green
  • eat, sea, team
  • even, equal

🔹 3. Unstressed E — /ə/ or silent

  • In unstressed syllables, “e” is often pronounced as a schwa /ə/ or not pronounced at all.

Examples:

  • problem → /ˈprɒb.ləm/ (schwa)
  • chocolate → /ˈtʃɒk.lət/ (e is silent)

🔹 4. “E” as part of other vowel combinations

  • ei – often /iː/ or /eɪ/
    • receive /rɪˈsiːv/
    • eight /eɪt/
  • ea – can be /iː/, /ɛ/, or even /eɪ/ depending on the word
    • /iː/: read, eat, sea
    • /ɛ/: head, bread, dead
    • /eɪ/: great, break, steak

🔹 5. Silent E

  • At the end of many words, “e” is silent but affects the pronunciation of the vowel before it (makes it long).

Examples:

  • made (not mad)
  • hope (not hop)
  • cube (not cub)

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