English Language & Usage Asked by aCloudemy on December 28, 2020
Is shop a CVC word?
Or, to rephrase the question, in the CVC structure, do C and V each refer to a single sound or to a single letter?
As I see it, a C or a V means a sound, and a sound could be 1 or 2 letters, so I thought a word like sh-o-p or b-a-th is a CVC word.
Just now someone told me that in CVC, C or V refer to a letter, so shop is a CCVC word.
Is that right or wrong?
English orthography and phonology are very different. And syllable structure has nothing to do with orthography, it's about sounds. So it's CVC word.
Answered by kemerover on December 28, 2020
C and V here only ever refer to sounds, never to letters. The word shop is pronounced either [ʃɒp] or [ʃɑp] depending on your accent, so it’s a CVC word: one consonant sound, one vowel sound, and one consonant sound. Letters never matter.
Answered by Dan on December 28, 2020
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