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In [[linguistics]], two words differing by only one unit of sound, or [[phoneme]], are called a '''minimal pair'''.  Minimal pairs are widely used in language teaching.  Examples are '''cat''' and '''mat''', '''fish''' and '''wish'''.  Spelling can disguise the fact of a minimal pair: '''bane''' and '''boon''', '''league''' and '''leak''', '''do''' and '''two''' are all examples.
In [[linguistics]], two words differing by only one unit of sound, or [[phoneme]], are called a '''minimal pair'''.  Minimal pairs are widely used in language teaching.  Examples are 'cat' and 'mat', 'fish' and 'wish', 'abortion' and 'apportion'.  Spelling can disguise the fact of a minimal pair:, 'bane' and 'boon', 'league' and 'leak', and 'do' and 'two' are all examples.

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In linguistics, two words differing by only one unit of sound, or phoneme, are called a minimal pair. Minimal pairs are widely used in language teaching. Examples are 'cat' and 'mat', 'fish' and 'wish', 'abortion' and 'apportion'. Spelling can disguise the fact of a minimal pair:, 'bane' and 'boon', 'league' and 'leak', and 'do' and 'two' are all examples.