Not really.
The th in this case has a particular sound to it, like in 'the.'
So it's not like you say 'fater', which it would be if the h was silent. So you say 'fa-ther', making the th sound just like you say in 'the.'
That is, if you know the pronunciation of 'the' !! :)
Robert H. Goddard
The "h" is silent. "tee ree oŋ" quickly together, with short "ee". "oŋ" is the same as "on" in "long".
I heard the term "Da" (silent d on then end? I don't know) quite often when I was in Scotland for several months. Father is still used as a term of address.
Physicist Edward Teller is often called the "Father of the H-bomb", but he wasn't working alone.
Little miss sunshine
The 'h' is silent as in 'on-ist'
e
Yes, the h in homage is silent.
The silent "h" in "honest" is due to the word's etymology from Old French, where the initial "h" was pronounced. Over time, the pronunciation shifted but the spelling remained unchanged.
The silent letter, as in not heard, is the U (gilt).However, the UI are actually a vowel pair with the same short I sound.
its the letter H is silent
The letter "h" is silent in the word "honesty" because it is a silent letter. In English, there are several words where the letter "h" is silent, and "honesty" is one of them. The silent "h" is a historical remnant from the word's origin in Old French.
The h is silent and the a's are pronounced like they are in the word father. Another way to look at it is "ahhblahhs", with the emphasis on the first syllable!
There are many silent h words such as herb. Other silent h words include honor, honest, hour, rhyme, and thyme.
The "h" is silent in spanish and "j" sounds like "h". nothing else is silent
H is the silent letter
The first H is silent