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A digraph blend is when two consonants are paired together to create a sound that blends them together. A couple of English examples are "ch" and "th."
I'm not 100% sure and am happy to be corrected, but this is my understanding of it: Blends are combinations of consonants where you can still hear the two separate sounds, eg. br, cr, pl. This seems counterintuitive to me, as 'blend' implies that you mixing something together so that it is indistinguishable, but apparently that's what a blend is. Digraphs are where two letters are used to represent a single sound - sh, th, wh, ch.
It is called a consonant blend or a digraph A consonant blend is when two or more consonants appear together and you hear each sound that each consonant would normally make. -- As in fingerprint A digraph is when the two letters represent a single sound. -- As in fang If described according to it's point of articulation it is a velar nasal consonant
a split digraph is to digraphs that have been split
A digraph is short for directed graph.
Two consonants that blend together and lose their own individual sounds and create a new unique sound. for example: ch, sh, th chair, shape, though