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LESSON 1

Word Drills
/m/ /n/
mansion nap
manuscript name
mayor nun
monarchy neck
memento night
mask normal
monk nasal
Mars nature
Mend national
middle notorious
Phrase Drills
/m/ /n/
Mother Mary nice nan
mistress Mary no nuts
major mind nappy noose
many manuscripts nanosecond night
misty moment notorious name
Sentence Drill
/m/ /n/
1. Mother Mary went to Manila 1. Nathaniel is happy to have a nice nan.
2. Mistress Mary is a mysterious woman. 2.There are no nuts in the jar.
3.Being with major minds feels awesome. 3. We kept a nappy noose for emergency.
4. He made many manuscripts. 4. The nanosecond night is not enough.
5. we had a misty moment in the 5. His name is famous for being notorious.
mountain.
Tongue Twister
/m/ /n/
Much mashed mushrooms Ninety-nine knitted knick-nacks were
Much mashed mushrooms nicked by ninety-nine knitted knick-nack
Much mashed mushrooms nickers.
Lesson 2
Read the following and emphasize the sound / t/.
Word Drills
Initial Middle End
take arctic belt
tall beauty best
tan better bought
tar city coat
task kitten covet
taught later draft
tell little habit
time mister height
toe pity kept
ton potato last
tone plenty meet
took practice part
tool pretty point
tour quality receipt
top staple roast
torn tattoo set
town title spent
toy total split
tune until sport
turn writer tact

Phrase Drills
best writer quality time
better tune right turn
last meeting tall teacher
late mister tender temper
little part tensed tear
Sentence Drill
1. The best writer wrote about God’s perfect timing.
2. Tina played a better tune compared to Tom.
3. My classmates and I had our last meeting.
4. The late mister was given another chance.
5. Her little part in the skit tells a lot.
6. We spent quality time together by talking in private.
7. He knew it is his right turn to sing.
8. The tall teacher taught us respect.
Lesson 3
/m/ /n/
beam been
came cane
clam clan
comb cone
dime din
foam phone
game gain
gram gran
same sane
seem seen
skim skin
spam span
sum son
team teen
term turn
Word Drills /ŋ/
angry meringue
betting string
finger tongue
dangle willing
hang wing
hungry moving
evening going
morning wrapping
moaning long
Selection Drill

Crossing the Bar


Alfred Lord Tennyson

Sunset and evening star,


And one clear call for me!
And may there be no moaning of the bar,
When I put out to sea,

But such a tide as moving seems asleep,


Too full for sound and foam,
When that which drew from out the boundless
deep

Twilight and evening bell,


And after that the dark!
And may there be no sadness of farewell,
When I embark;

For tho’ from out bourne of Time and Place


The flood may bear me far,
I hope to see my Pilot face to face
When I have crost the bar.

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