The English Oracle

Silent letters in English

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Music by Eric Matyas
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Track title: Puzzle Game 3

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Chapters
00:00 Silent Letters In English
00:33 Answer 1 Score 3
00:58 Answer 2 Score 4
01:41 Answer 3 Score 7
02:40 Accepted Answer Score 14
04:09 Thank you

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Full question
https://english.stackexchange.com/questi...

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Content licensed under CC BY-SA
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Tags
#etymology #orthography #pronunciationvsspelling #phonology #silentletters

#avk47



ACCEPTED ANSWER

Score 14


All letters in English are silent. Letters are visual signs, and they don't make any noise.

What you're all peeving about is the fact that

  • Modern English spellings don't represent Modern English pronunciations.

And it's true; they don't.
That's because they represent Middle English pronunciations.

Before Caxton set up his printshop in England in 1470 something, literate people speld inglish the way they spowke itt, and everyboddiz speling was diferent, juste as handewritting is nowe.

But printing always spelled the same words the same way. And so spelling got fixed before the finale of the Great Vowel Shift, which changed the place in the mouth where long (but not short) vowels were pronounced, and also totally destroyed the difference between long and short vowels in English.

The fact that English spelling is like Middle English is why Chaucer looks almost readable for modern English speakers when they see it, but is totally incomprehensible when presented spoken. We no longer understand the language that English spelling describes (and describes rather well, by the way -- the orthography is a decent phonemic accounting of Middle English).

So that made for lots of "silent letters". The rest are erroneous spellings (often, island), various stabs at diphthongs, and sounds that disappeared though their results didn't (all those gh spellings are remnants of the [x] allophone of Middle English /h/).

Don't think of them as silent letters. There their to distinguish things we don't dare distinguish in speech but somebody thought we'd like to know about, so we could screw them up in spelling
-- the difference between there, their, and they're, for instance.




ANSWER 2

Score 7


This is a list that I, a speaker of standard southern British English, compiled some time ago:

b: debt, subtle, lamb, tomb
c: science, rescind, muscle, indict, Leicester, Connecticut
ch: yacht
d: sandwich, Wednesday, grandson
g: gnaw, gnome, sign, phlegm, reign
h: heir, hour, dishonest, ghost, annihilate, vehicle, hurrah, rhyme, khaki, thyme
gh: although, through, thorough, bough, bought, taught
k: knee, knit, knife
l: calf, talk, salmon, could, should, would
p: pneumonia, psychiatry, ptomaine, corps, raspberry
r: iron

In RP, r is not pronounced when followed by a consonant or silent e, or is word-final: lord, tire, far

s: aisle, island, précis, viscount, corps, rendezvous
t: hasten, thistle, Christmas, soften, ballet, waltz
th: asthma (some speakers)
w: wren, two, answer,
x: grand prix, billet-doux
z: rendezvous




ANSWER 3

Score 4


You need to revisit your list. It's erroneous.

Silent letter is a letter that, in a particular word, does not correspond to any sound in the word's pronunciation.

Please consider the various comments above and also these silent letters.

F/J/Q/V/Y: There are no words (I could recall) that take a silent letter.

  • R- Yes, there are no words in American English. BrE has some silent Rs.
  • Z - laissez-faire, rendezvous

If Etymology (the origin of words) interests you, then you’ll find learning silent letters very fascinating, as they provide so much information about the history of these words!




ANSWER 4

Score 3


The original question was asking about silent "z" and silent "m"

Silent "z" occurs in recent French loans: "laissez-faire", "répondez s'il vous plait" and the already mentioned "rendezvous".

Silent "m" occurs in initial Greek-derived mn-: "mnemonic", "Mnemosyne", but is pronounced after a prefix (amnesia).