1 / 12

9 Great spelling rules

9 Great spelling rules. October 2011. Kindly contributed by Judith White, Somerset Skills & Learning. Search for Judith on www.skillsworkshop.org This PPT accompanies a hand-out – also available on skillsworkshop.org. Curriculum links

helene
Download Presentation

9 Great spelling rules

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 9 Great spelling rules October 2011. Kindly contributed by Judith White, Somerset Skills & Learning. Search for Judith on www.skillsworkshop.org This PPT accompanies a hand-out – also available on skillsworkshop.org Curriculum links This PPT is useful for underpinning the spelling elements of the Entry 2, Entry 3 and Level 1 Functional English criteria and the Adult Literacy Curriculum. Please refer to the resource description page on skillsworkshop for detailed curriculum links and related resources.

  2. 9 Great Spelling Rules

  3. i before e except after c when the word rhymes with ‘bee’.

  4. Making plurals: Usually we simply add ‘s’, but if the word ends with s, x, z, ch or sh, we add ‘es’.

  5. Making plurals when the word ends with ‘y’: If the word ends with a vowel then ‘y’, just add ‘s’. If the word ends with a consonant, drop the ‘y’ and add ‘ies’.

  6. Adding suffixes when the word ends with ‘y’: Drop the ‘y’ and add ‘i’ + the suffix unless you are adding ‘ing’ e.g. worry, worried, worrying.

  7. Adding suffixes when the word ends with ‘e’: If the next letter is a consonant, keep the ‘e’, e.g. amazement, but if the next letter is a vowel, drop the ‘e’, e.g. amazing.

  8. Doubling a consonant before adding ‘ing’: If the last three letters have a vowel in the middle, then you double the consonant, e.g, stop  stopping, begin  beginning.

  9. Adding ‘ible’ or ‘able’: If the word is a word on its own without the suffix (e.g. tax, remark, enjoy), add ‘able’. If the word is NOT a word on its own without the suffix e.g. terr (terrible), vis (visible), horr (horrible), add ‘ible’.

  10. Words ending with ‘ick’ or ‘ic’: If the word has one syllable, use ‘ick’, e.g. click, pick, but if the word has two or more syllables, it ends with ‘ic’, e.g. panic, traffic.

  11. Words ending with ‘cal’ or ‘cle’: If the word is an adjective (describing word), use ‘cal’, e.g. comical, logical, but if the word is an noun (naming word), use ‘cle’, e.g. bicycle, vehicle.

  12. Can you find any exceptions? Add them to your word book.

More Related