Silent Letters In English: Why Do They Exist And What Are The Rules

Silent Letters In English: In the English language, they say, every rule comes with an exception. This holds even truer when it comes to spellings. There are many words in English, which carry letters that do not seem to have any business being there, as far their pronunciation is concerned. This makes learning English difficult, and sometimes even leaves native speakers perplexed. Having said that, silent letters are a fascinating aspect of the language. Their presence is not arbitrary but they serve various functions and have different origins, making the language rich.

One of the primary reasons for silent letters in English, it is said, is the historical evolution of the language. English has borrowed extensively from other languages, such as Latin, French, Norse, and German, often preserving the original spellings of words durng the process, even when the pronunciation changed. For example, the silent ‘k’ in ‘knight’ is a remnant of Old English and Middle English when the word was pronounced with a hard ‘k’ sound at the beginning. Similarly, the silent ‘b’ in ‘debt’ was said to have been added in the 17th century to align the word more closely with its Latin root, ‘debitum’, even though it was never pronounced.

Silent letters also play a crucial role in differentiating homophones, which are words that are pronounced the same way but have distinct meanings. For instance, though ‘write’ and ‘rite’ have a similar pronunciation, the silent ‘w’ in ‘write’ differentiates it from ‘rite’. This differentiation helps in maintaining clarity in written communication, ensuring that readers can understand the intended meaning based on the context and spelling of the words.

Silent letters also play a role in indicating the pronunciation of vowels within words. They can signal whether a vowel is long or short, as seen in the difference between ‘hop’ and ‘hope’. In ‘hope’, the silent ‘e’ at the end of the word signals that the preceding ‘o’ has a long pronunciation. This function of silent letters as pronunciation guides is particularly useful in a language like English, where vowel sounds can vary widely.

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Silent Letter Rules

Despite their usefulness, silent letters can pose challenges for those trying to learn English, requiring additional attention and practice. A few rules can be kept in mind to make the learning easy.

B: If the letter ‘b’ comes before ‘t’, it is silent. Examples: ‘debt’, ‘doubt’, ‘subtle’. A similar rule applies if the letter ‘b’ comes after ‘m’, like in ‘thumb’, ‘lamb’, or ‘succumb’.

C: ‘C’ will be silent if it is placed after ‘s’ and before ‘i’, ‘e’, or ‘y’, — muscle, ascent, conscience, scythe. C is also silent when spelt with ‘k’, as in ‘pluck’.

E: The letter ‘e’ is always silent if it comes at the end of a word, giving the preceding vowel a long pronunciation, like in ‘hope’, ‘shave’, or ‘alive’. ‘E’ at the end of a word is not silent when it comes with an accent. Such words are ‘café’ or ‘exposé’.

GH: ‘Gh’, when placed together at the middle or end of a word, are sometimes silent — like in ‘sigh’, ‘thigh’, ‘though’, or ‘through’. There are, however, exceptions when the digraph (two consecutive letters in the alphabet coming together to make one sound) takes the pronunciation of ‘f’, instead — such as ‘laugh’ or ‘cough’. ‘G’ is mostly silent when it comes before ‘n’ — ‘gnat’, ‘champagne’, ‘foreign’. 

K: When positioned before ‘n’, the letter ‘k’ is silent — ‘knife’, ‘knowledge’, ‘knight’, ‘know’.

L: The letter ‘l’ is usually silent when it comes before ‘m’, as in ‘calm’ and ‘balm’, but not in ‘helm’ or ‘opthalmology’. It’s silent in ‘salmon’ and ‘colonel’ too, and before ‘d’, ‘f’ and ‘k’ in some words such as ‘would’, ‘calf’ and ‘walk’.    

N: The digraph ‘mn’ has the ‘n’ silent, like in ‘damn’, ‘hymn’, or ‘autumn’. 

P: The letter ‘p’ is silent when it comes at the beginning of a word and is placed before ‘s’, as in ‘psycho’ or ‘pseudo’. The letter gets silent in other words also, but not as a rule as such — ‘pneumonia’, ‘receipt’ or ‘pterodactyl’ for example.

W: ‘W’ is silent in many words that begin with ‘wr’. The letter is not pronounced elsewhere also when it comes before ‘r’. The examples are: ‘write’, ‘wreck’, ‘awry’, or ‘playwright’. Some other words too has W in a silent role, such as ‘brawl’, ‘whole’, ‘sword’ or ‘two’.

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Silent Letters In English: A To Z

In English language, none of the 26 letters of the alphabet seems to have been spared from going silent sometimes. Starting from the all-important ‘a’ to the least used ‘z’, every letter, with perhaps one exception, gets its turn to be silent in one word or the other. Here is an inexhaustive list:

A: ‘Bread’, ‘tread’, ‘breath’, or ‘aisle’       

B: ‘Debt’, ‘doubt’, ‘subtle’, ‘dumb’, ‘tomb’, ‘climb’, ‘lamb’ 

C: ‘Science’, ‘scent’, ‘scissors’, ‘muscle’

D: ‘Bridge’, ‘ledge’, ‘handsome’

E: ‘Make’, ‘due, ‘candle’, ‘toe’ (basically in every word that ends with the letter ‘e’, unless it has a accent as in ‘café’) 

F: This is perhaps the only letter, which does not seem to have a completely silent run. However, one word, which uses two ‘f’s and has two pronunciations,  ruins its record. The word is ‘fifth’. While one pronunciation has the second ‘f’ silent, the other has both ‘f’s pronounced.  

G: ‘Gnash’, ‘align’, ‘benign’, ‘sign’, ‘feign’, ‘high’, ‘night’, ‘thorough’, and ‘phlegm’ too.

H: ‘Heir’, ‘honest’, ‘honour’, ‘rhyme’, ‘anchor’, ‘chaos’, ‘echo’ 

I: ‘Business’, ‘suit’, ‘fruit’

J: This one comes close to ‘f’ when it comes to being heard. However, there is one word that surely makes the letter silent universally — ‘marijuana’, legal or illegal 

K: ‘Knife’, ‘knight’, ‘knee’, ‘knoll, ‘knock’

L: ‘Palm’, ‘chalk’, ‘could’, ‘half’, ‘colonel’, ‘salmon’

M: Silent ‘m’ exists too, in ‘mnemonic’

N: ‘Column’, ‘condemn’, ‘solemn’

O: ‘People, ‘leopard’, ‘enough’, ‘double’

P: ‘Psalm’, ‘psychology’, ‘corps’, ‘pneumonia’, ‘raspberry’, ‘receipt’, ‘pterodactyl’

Q: ‘Lacquer’

R: The letter is born to remain silent unless a word begins with it (‘raze’, ‘read’, river’, ‘road’, or rude’), or has it as the second letter (‘arrange’, ‘erase’, ‘orange’, ‘brawl’, ‘tread’) — the third too in some instances (‘thread’, ‘phrase’). ‘February’ is perhaps the only word with a pronounced ‘r’ (the first one) despite it being the fourth letter. Whether it’s the last letter as in ‘mother’, the third letter as in ‘word’, or the third and last letters in ‘further’, ‘r’ just does not get to be heard’

S: ‘Aisle’, ‘apropos’, ‘bourgeois’, ‘debris’, ‘island’.

T: ‘Ballet’, ‘castle’, ‘whistle’, ‘gourmet’, ‘valet’

U: ‘Guide’, ‘guitar’, ‘guest’, ‘laugh’, ‘monologue’, ‘tongue’

V: This letter actually beats ‘f’ in this race. There is no word that has a silent ‘v’, if you discard the poetic references in old English that removed the letter altogether from words, like in ‘ne’er’ or ‘e’er’.  

W: ‘Wrong’, ‘wright’, ‘awesome’, ‘answer’, ‘wry’, ‘tow’

X: ‘Bureaux’, ‘choux’, ‘doux’, ‘faux’

Y: ‘Beyond’ (it’s pronounced ‘bee-ond’)

Z: ‘Rendezvous’

 

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