Silent and invisible letters in English: Difference between revisions

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'''B''': '''thúm'''b'''  dúm'''b'''  núm'''b'''  clîm'''b'''  lím'''b'''  dé'''b'''t  dòu'''b'''t  sú'''b'''tle
'''B''': '''thúm'''b'''  dúm'''b'''  núm'''b'''  clîm'''b'''  lím'''b'''  dé'''b'''t  dòu'''b'''t  sú'''b'''tle
'''C''': '''indî'''c'''t  Tû'''c'''són  Conné'''c'''ticut  blancmange''' (*bləmónzh); after '''s''' before a front vowel: '''s'''c'''êne  s'''c'''îence  effervés'''c'''e

Revision as of 13:42, 12 July 2009

Silent letters constitute a notorious phenomenon in English: in wréstle, for example, only four out of the seven letters are actually sounded (*résl), and there can be strings of them in place names, exemplified by the trio Léicester, Glóucester, Worcester (*Léster *Glóster *Wùster). (The accents show stress and pronunciation, see English phonemes.)

But redundant letters can serve to distinguish between words that sound the same:

knôw knowledge = negative

knót tie = nót negative

wráp parcel = ráp knock, talk

wrîte read = rîght correct = rîte ritual

chéck verify = BrE chéque money

Typical silent letters are b finally after m or before final t (-mb -bt); g or k initially before n (gn-, kn-); gh finally or before final t ( -gh -ght); l after à and before final f or m (-lf -lm); n finally after m (-mn).

List

Silent A is found in: ard lëarn Múrray = Mòray nébulaê; BrE words ending in -ary: sécondary díctionary; and all examples from Latin of aê: nébulaê (in the latter case, the American spelling omits the 'a')

B: thúmb dúmb númb clîmb límbbt dòubt súbtle

C: indîct Tûcsón Connécticut blancmange (*bləmónzh); after s before a front vowel: scêne scîence effervésce