Final TH Phrases for Speech Therapy
22 short phrases for practicing /th/ in the final position — the bridge between single words and sentences. Every phrase is pronunciation-checked and contains no competing sounds, so each repetition stays on target.
Why phrase-level practice matters
Once a sound is solid in single words, phrases add the first layer of difficulty: the target now survives next to other words, but the utterance is still short enough to self-monitor. Skipping straight from words to conversation is where many targets fall apart.
Use a small set per session and keep the pace slow at first. When accuracy is high across two or three sessions, the same phrases stretch into sentences — the next level below.
All verified Final TH phrases
- warm bath1× /th/
- big bath1× /th/
- clean bath1× /th/
- long bath1× /th/
- blue cloth1× /th/
- new cloth1× /th/
- brown earth1× /th/
- green earth1× /th/
- new growth1× /th/
- big mouth1× /th/
- open mouth1× /th/
- long path1× /th/
- new path1× /th/
- easy math1× /th/
- long month1× /th/
- new month1× /th/
- long breath1× /th/
- one booth1× /th/
- a warm bath1× /th/
- a new bath1× /th/
- a blue cloth1× /th/
- a mean myth1× /th/
Every line is checked with the CMU Pronouncing Dictionary: each word's pronunciation is verified, and the target sound is confirmed in the final position.
Need this practice on a printable worksheet?
Ga-loo builds a checked, print-ready PDF for a chosen sound, word position, age, and theme — every word verified before you print.
Create a worksheetKeep practicing
Frequently asked questions
- What are Final TH phrases?
- Short 2–4 word phrases where /th/ appears in the final position of a word — for example: “warm bath”, “big bath”. They are the practice step between single words and full sentences.
- Why do these phrases avoid competing sounds?
- Sounds that children commonly confuse with the target (like /w/ for /r/) can undo a fragile new skill. At phrase level we keep practice clean; competing sounds return naturally at sentence level.
- When should a child move from words to phrases?
- A common rule of thumb is high accuracy (about 80–90%) at word level across a few sessions. The SLP guiding the child makes the call — this list does not replace clinical judgment.
- Can I get these phrases on a printable worksheet?
- Yes. Ga-loo generates printable articulation worksheets for /th/ with a chosen age range and theme, and phonetically checks every word before building the PDF.