Is flying, cried, clapped, try, shook are consonant clusteres

http://www.sil.org/lingualinks/literacy/referencematerials/glossaryofliteracyterms/whatisaconsonantcluster.htm

I'd say that these are consonant clusters, based on the definition in that link:

fl (but not ng)
cr
cl (but not pp)
tr
(not sh)

Yes, "flying," "cried," "clapped," "try," and "shook" are examples of words that contain consonant clusters. A consonant cluster is a sequence of two or more consonant sounds that appear together in a word, without any vowels in between.

To determine if a word contains a consonant cluster, follow these steps:

1. Identify the individual consonant sounds in the word. In the case of "flying," the consonant sounds are /fl/ and /ng/. In "cried," the cluster is /cr/ and /d/. For "clapped," it is /cl/ and /pp/, and so on.

2. Check if there is a vowel in between the consonant sounds. In the examples you provided, there are no vowels separating the consonant sounds. Therefore, they qualify as consonant clusters.

So, yes, "flying," "cried," "clapped," "try," and "shook" all contain consonant clusters.