Silent and invisible letters in English: Difference between revisions

From Citizendium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Ro Thorpe
No edit summary
imported>Ro Thorpe
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
'''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]].)
'''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]].)


Silent letters can be misleading, as with Thaîland and îsland, which rhyme, or they can be
Silent letters can be misleading, as in '''T'''ha'''îland''' and '''î'''s'''land''', which rhyme, or they can be easily to ignore, as in w'''róng''', '''y'''e'''ôman''', and '''lô'''w. They  can serve to distinguish between words that sound the same:
But redundant letters can serve to distinguish between words that sound the same:


'''knôw''' ''knowledge'' = '''nô''' ''negative
'''knôw''' ''knowledge'' = '''nô''' ''negative

Revision as of 13:22, 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.)

Silent letters can be misleading, as in Thaîland and îsland, which rhyme, or they can be easily to ignore, as in wróng, yeôman, and w. They 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 of examples

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 blancmànge (*bləmónzh); after s before a front vowel: scêne scîence effervésce