Long vowels and short vowels are the backbone of English phonics. Once a child can reliably tell them apart — and knows the patterns that signal which one to use — reading and spelling click into place. This guide explains both sounds, the rules that govern them, and how to teach the difference without confusion.
Short vowels — the starting point
Short vowels are taught first because they appear in the simplest words. Each one has a “brisk” sound — short and clipped.
- Short A /æ/ — cat, hat, map, tap, fan
- Short E /ɛ/ — bed, leg, ten, wet, hen
- Short I /ɪ/ — sit, pin, big, lip, fin
- Short O /ɒ/ — hot, dog, cop, box, log
- Short U /ʌ/ — run, bug, cup, mud, fun
The mnemonic kids use: short vowels say their “closed mouth” sound — the sound you make when your mouth snaps shut.
Long vowels — the letter says its own name
Long vowels say their alphabet name. The vowel in “cake” says /eɪ/ — just like saying the letter A.
- Long A /eɪ/ — cake, rain, play, day, tale
- Long E /iː/ — feet, sea, me, tree, chief
- Long I /aɪ/ — kite, night, pie, my, bike
- Long O /oʊ/ — bone, road, snow, toe, note
- Long U /juː/ or /uː/ — cube, blue, flew, dune, moon
5 patterns that make a vowel long
1. Magic E (CVCe)
A silent E at the end makes the vowel long: cap → cape, kit → kite, hop → hope, cub → cube. This is the most common pattern — see the full magic-e word list.
2. Vowel teams (two vowels together)
“When two vowels go walking, the first one does the talking” — an imperfect but useful rule for common pairs:
- ai, ay → /eɪ/: rain, play, wait, say, trail
- ee, ea → /iː/: feet, meat, tree, seal, queen
- oa, oe → /oʊ/: boat, toe, coat, foam, hoe
- ue, ui → /juː/ or /uː/: glue, suit, fruit, blue
3. Open syllable (vowel at end of syllable)
When a vowel ends a syllable with no consonant following, it’s long: me, go, no, he, she, we, be, hi, so, lo. This rule also governs multi-syllable words: ba-by, ti-ger, o-pen, spi-der.
4. Vowel + gh/igh
The combination -igh makes the long I sound: night, light, right, sight, fight, might, tight, high, nigh.
5. Vowel + ld, nd, nd
Some words follow the pattern “vowel stays long before ld or nd”: child, wild, mild, kind, mind, find, told, cold, gold, hold.
When the rules break down
English is not perfectly phonetic. “Head” has -ea but a short /ɛ/ sound. “Give” has silent-e but a short vowel. These exceptions exist, and the best approach is to flag them explicitly (“this is a tricky one”) rather than pretending the rules always work. Over 85% of English words follow predictable patterns — that’s enough to make phonics worth teaching systematically.
How to practise at home
- Short-vs-long minimal pairs: Read two columns side by side — cap/cape, kit/kite, hop/hope — and have your child say which vowel is short and which is long.
- Sorting game: Write 20 words on cards. Sort them into two boxes: short vowel / long vowel. Time it and beat your record.
- Listen and tap: You say a word; child taps once for short, twice for long. Fast and no writing required.
The phoneme map has audio for all 43 English phonemes — use it to demonstrate the difference in vowel quality before drilling words.