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Withhold is one word that does.
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Hobby, hubby, hugged, haggle, hottest and hatter are words. They contain a double consonant.
In the English language hundreds of words have double consonants in the middle or a single consonant in the middle or both. Here are a few examples: withhold and beryllosis You will find a lot of medical words have this consonant pattern.
because you only double the consonant on two syllable words when the stress is on the second syllable: beGIN becomes beginning but HAppen becomes happened
consonant sound
airlessnessaimlessnessagelessnessaggressivenessartlessnessassassinassertivenessassessbossinessblissfulnessbrassinessbreathlessnessceaselessnesscrossnesscrassnesscarelessnesschildlessnessclasslessnessexpressivenessfaultlessnessfearlessnessflawlessnessfruitlessnessglassinessglossinessgrossnessguilelessnessgutlessnessheartlessnesshelplessnesslawlessnessjoylessnessmassivenessmindlessnessmessinesspainlessnesspointlessnesspassivenesspossessprogressivenessrepressivenessremorselessnessselflessnesssenselessnessshamelessnesssleeplessnesssoullessnessspinelessnessstressfulnesssubmissivenessthoughtlessnesstimelessnessuselessness
spammers, discussion, well, assassin, password
Some examples of words with double consonants are: balloon, happy, coffee, pepper.
When adding a suffix to a word, the final consonant is doubled in cases where the word ends in a single consonant followed by a single vowel. Examples include "stop" becoming "stopping" and "run" becoming "running."
When suffixes beginning with a consonant are added to the base word "harmless," the final consonant "e" is typically dropped before adding the suffix. For example, to form "harmlessly" or "harmful," the final "e" in "harmless" is removed.
No. That would be words like " will" , " grass " ,like that.