Basic Phonics Quiz
Practice letter sounds and spelling patterns with quick 4-choice phonics challenges!
START

What is the free Basic Phonics Quiz?

The Basic Phonics Quiz is a free web app for practicing the relationship between English letters and sounds in a 4-choice quiz format.

It is designed for elementary school to junior high school learners who want to build confidence with letter sounds, word reading, pronunciation, and spelling patterns.

Original questions for phonics basics

The quiz uses original questions and choices. It does not copy textbook passages, workbook exercises, entrance exam questions, test questions, official PDFs, or existing teaching materials.

Common phonics facts such as letter sounds, short vowels, CVC patterns, silent e, digraphs, blends, vowel teams, and r-controlled vowels are used to create a new course structure.

Course lineup

Hints with simple diagrams

Hints change to match the current question. Learners can see simple original diagrams for CVC words, silent e, digraphs, blends, vowel teams, and r-controlled vowels.

My Page keeps challenge history, best records, and often missed questions for review.

What learners can practice here

This quiz starts with simple letter sounds and moves step by step into short vowels, CVC words, silent e, digraphs, blends, vowel teams, r-controlled vowels, and word families.

Each question is short, so learners can try a few questions before class, during home study, or as a quick review after learning a new sound pattern.

Why the hints are useful

The hints do more than show the answer. They point to the part of the word that matters: the first sound, the middle vowel, the final sound, the silent e, or a two-letter pattern.

Simple diagrams help learners see how letters combine into sounds. This makes the quiz easy to use for independent practice, classroom warm-ups, and parent-supported review.

A friendly first step toward reading English words

Phonics is not about memorizing every word one by one. It gives learners small clues for trying to read a new word: split the word, find the vowel, notice the pattern, then blend the sounds.

English has exceptions, so this app is best used together with real listening, speaking, and reading practice. Still, the patterns here can give learners a helpful starting point and a feeling of “I can read this.”

権利・非公式表記

URL copyURL copy