Did You Know?

Some digraphs can be silent, like "kn" in "knot."

What Are Digraphs?

Digraphs are two letters that sound like one.

Why Are They Important?

They help us read words that are tricky.

What Digraphs Do

They make reading easier.

They help us spell words right.

They sound fun when we say them.

They are in many kids' books.

They help us learn new words.

They make writing more fun!

More About Digraphs

Digraphs have been used for a long time. They help us write sounds in a clear way. Many languages use digraphs too. They make words sound right.

We see digraphs in books, songs, and games. They help us read stories and learn new things. When we know digraphs, we can read better.

In the future, we will keep using digraphs. They will help kids learn to read. Digraphs are fun and help us with words!

How Topics Connect

graph TD A["Digraph (orthography)"] --> B["Represents a single sound"] A --> C["Example: 'ch' in English"] D["Ligature (writing)"] --> E["Joining two letters"] D --> F["Example: 'æ'"] G["Digraph (computing)"] --> H["Two characters as one"] I["Directed graph (graph theory)"] --> J["Mathematical representation"] K["CIA cryptonym"] --> L["Covert code name"] M["ISO 639-1 code"] --> N["Two-letter language code"]

What Do These Words Mean?

Digraph:A pair of letters that make one sound, like 'ch'.
Ligature:Two letters joined together to look like one symbol.
Directed graph:A type of diagram that shows connections with arrows.
Cryptonym:A secret code name used to hide the real name.
ISO 639-1:A standard for two-letter codes that represent languages.