There are none.
The double L in llama is not technically silent. The LL is a separate "letter" pronounced as Y in Spanish. When the word was picked up in English, most people pronounced it as (lah-ma) because there is no separate LL sound.
This is also seen in the word "llano" (prairie), pronounced (lah-no) whereas the Spanish term is llanos (yah-nos).
The silent L appears in salmon, calf, half, could, would, and should.
The L provides an AW sound in caulk, talk, walk, chalk and in solder, so it is not actually silent, just pronounced differently than it was originally. The same applies to dialects that do not pronounce the L in palm and calm.
Words with a silent 'l' (L) include:
balm
It is spelled... ratatoullie. the double L is silent.
Silent consonants are words that are spelled with silent letters. Example: Knife - the k is silent - and it is pronounced "nife" but is spelled knife
Because 'knife' is also spelled with a silent 'k' and 'psychiatry' with a 'p' and 'dumb' with a 'b'. These spellings are leftovers from a time when the extra letters were not silent. Words like thumb, lamb, and dumb actually had a use for the now silent letters. English has thousands of such words. Some words can be pronounced correctly with or without their 'silent' letters, such as February (usually pronounced feb-u-wary but also correct as feb-ru-ary).
Some examples of words with a silent "l" are "walk," "calm," "half," and "chalk."
ignite, important
L
The word "walking" is spelled with an "L" because it comes from the Old English word "wealcan," which first referred to the act of moving or progressing on foot. Over time, the spelling of the word evolved to its current form.
The Japanese language has no l sound.
blamm
The word "silent" in Japanese is spelled like this: サイレント
Leash does have the long e sound, as if it were spelled leesh, but goose does not. Goose has a silent e sound, as if it were spelled goos.
special is spelled s-p-e-c-i-a-l and there is only one 'e' and it is in between the 'p' and the 'c'