Ll Sound: /l/

Letter L Phonics — "lion" 🦁

The letter L makes the /l/ sound as in "lion" and "leg". Your tongue touches the ridge behind your upper front teeth to make this smooth sound.

/l/
The sound letter L makes
L is for lion 🦁

The letter L makes the /l/ sound as in "lion" and "leg". Your tongue touches the ridge behind your upper front teeth to make this smooth sound.

Beginner Words — Letter L

Short, high-frequency words that begin with or contain the /l/ sound. Perfect for preschool and early kindergarten.

letlotliplidlegloglabladlaglap

Words with Letter L

lionlegliplidlitloglotlabladlaglapledletlowlug

CVC Words with Letter L

Consonant-Vowel-Consonant words are the building blocks of early reading. Sound them out letter by letter: l — a — b.

labladlaglapledlegletlidliplitloglotlug

Advanced Words — Letter L

Longer, multi-syllable words for readers who have mastered basic phonics. Great for grades 1–2 and beyond.

ladderlandedlanguagelaunchleaderlessonletterlistenlittlelively

How to Teach Letter L

Say the sound first

Say /l/ slowly, 3–4 times. Then say the keyword: "lion". Ask your child to repeat it and hold up a finger each time they hear the /l/ sound.

Write the letter

Trace uppercase L and lowercase l in the air, on paper, or in sand. Say the sound each time. Kinesthetic practice helps letter-sound connections stick.

Read the beginner word list

Work through the beginner words above one at a time. For each word, blend the sounds aloud: "l — e — t".

Play an I Spy game

Look around the room for objects that start with L. Take turns — "I spy with my little eye something beginning with /l/..." This builds phonemic awareness and makes learning fun.

Practice CVC words

Use the CVC word list above to practice blending. Write a CVC word, cover the last two letters, reveal them one by one, and ask your child to blend the sounds into a word.

💡 Quick tip for parents & teachers

When a child struggles to recall a sound, always refer back to the keyword: "What does L say? Think of 🦁 lion!" Associating the letter with a vivid picture word is one of the most reliable memory anchors in phonics instruction.