Ch 7: Syllabic Analysis, Structural Analysis, and Orthographic Knowledge (33%) Flashcards

1
Q

structural analysis

A

process of decoding a multisyllabic word with an affix (prefix, suffix) added to a base word

students recognize a word by “putting together” their knowledge of affix and base word

mainly upper grades (learning what sounds they make and what the prefixes, suffixes, roots mean)

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2
Q

syllabic analysis

A

process of decoding a multisyllabic word by examining the word’s syllables

students recognize the word by “putting together” their knowledge of each of the word’s syllables

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3
Q

orthographic knowledge

A

what a person knows about how to spell words (a synonym for spelling)

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4
Q

morpheme

A

most elemental unit of meaning in a language

in English, two types: some words and all affixes (prefixes and suffixes)

example: elephant is one morpheme but walked (walk+ed) is two and chairs (chair+s) is two

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5
Q

bound vs. free morpheme

A

bound: prefixes and suffixes that cannot occur alone, they must be attached to a root word (i.e. un- or -est)
free: uttered alone with meaning (i.e. test)

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6
Q

syllables - vowel vs. consonant

A

syllable is pronounced with a single, uninterrupted sound

vowel- can be a syllable
consonant - cannot be a syllable without the vowel

all syllables must have at least one vowel (English lang has about 2800 syllables)

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7
Q

open vs. closed syllable

A

open ends with a vowel (i.e. be, go)

closed ends in a consonant (i.e. kick-ball, nor-mal)

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