A closed syllable exception is a word (or syllable) that looks like a regular closed syllable—one vowel followed by one or more consonants—but the vowel makes a long sound instead of the usual short sound. Common patterns include:

  • -ild (wild, child)
  • -ind (kind, find)
  • -old (gold, cold)
  • -olt (bolt, colt)
  • -ost (most, post)

In most closed syllables, a word like “cat” has a short vowel because the consonant “t” closes it in.
In a closed syllable exception like “bold,” the “l-d” still “close” the syllable, but the “o” says its long sound, so it doesn’t follow the normal closed-syllable rule. These patterns are usually taught explicitly in phonics, so readers learn that some “closed-looking” syllables break the rule and keep a long vowel instead of a short one.