A syllable must contain a vowel or vowel-like sound, including diphthongs. The most
common type of syllable in language also has a consonant (C) before the vowel (V) and
is typically represented as CV.
Technically, the basic elements of the syllable are the onset (one or more consonants)
followed by the rhyme. The rhyme (sometimes written as “rime”) consists of a vowel,
which is treated as the nucleus, plus any following consonant (s), described as the coda.
Syllables like me, to or no have an onset and a nucleus, but no coda.
They are known as open syllables. When a coda is present, as in the syllables up, cup, at
or hat, they are called closed syllables. The basic structure of the kind of syllable found
in English words like green (CCVC), eggs (VCC), and (VCC), ham (CVC), I (V), do (CV),
not (CVC), like (CVC), them (CVC), Sam (CVC), I (V), am (VC) is shown in the
accompanying diagram.