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The letters spell the word impede.
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The word is echo.
Guile is an example of a word with two silent letters. Both the u and the final e are silent, which is not to say that they have no use in the word. The u is there to ensure that the g continues to produce a hard sound and not the softer sound in the word judge. The final e is there to change the sound of the i from the i sound in fish to the i sound in bike.
Usually it is not.
No, the word "pin" has a short i sound, not a short e sound. The short i sound in "pin" is similar to the sound in "win" or "sit."
The word "friend" has a short e sound but is spelled with an ie.
long "E" sound its spelled as "y"
The word "says" (sez) is a unique sound for the AY, but it is related to the past tense "said" (sed) where the AI also has a short E sound, as in the words "again" and "against." The A word many also has a short E sound.
There are no words ending in E where the E has a short E sound. The words spelled with "she" that have short E's include shed, shelf, shell, shelter, shelve, and shepherd.
quiche. suite is a similar sound
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.
The French word "femme" is pronounced as "fam" with a silent 'e' at the end.
The only common words are forms of the word jeopardy. Other words with an EO pair have a schwa sound (burgeon, bludgeon, pigeon) not a short E.
No, the word "friend" does not have a long vowel sound. The "ie" in "friend" makes a short /e/ sound, as in "bed."
Some examples are "bus," "hurt," "curb," and "nurse."
The best known are the words again and against (uh-gen,uh-genst), and the word said (sed). The word "says" also has a short E sound (sez).