lath
Some examples of words where adding a silent "e" makes the vowel long are "hope," "save," and "slide."
To make a short vowel word into a long vowel word, you usually add a silent "e" at the end of the word. This "magic e" changes the vowel sound from short to long. For example, "kit" becomes "kite" and "hop" becomes "hope."
The long vowel is the i. the e in white is silent MOST but NOT all words with that silent e ending make the vowel before it, long. An exception (of quite a number), is the word EPITOME, where all the vowels are short AND the the e is pronounced as a long e, as in EEL. These are the joyfully confusing twists and turns of the english language.. A short i is found in the word DIG Another long i word is RIDE, again with a silent e
Words with long vowel sounds often have a silent "e" at the end (e.g. "make"), a vowel-consonant-e pattern (e.g. "bike"), or a vowel digraph like "ai" or "ee" (e.g. "rain," "see"). Learning common long vowel patterns and practicing identifying them in words can help you figure out words with long vowel sounds.
The silent e at the end of a word usually changes the vowel sound before it. It makes the preceding vowel say its name instead of a short sound. For example, in the word "hope," the silent e changes the pronunciation of the o from a short sound to a long sound.
The word "serene" contains the long e vowel sound, which is typically represented by a single vowel followed by a silent e. In this case, the e at the end of the word serves to make the preceding vowel long rather than short.
To make a short vowel word into a long vowel word, you usually add a silent "e" at the end of the word. This "magic e" changes the vowel sound from short to long. For example, "kit" becomes "kite" and "hop" becomes "hope."
The long vowel is the i. the e in white is silent MOST but NOT all words with that silent e ending make the vowel before it, long. An exception (of quite a number), is the word EPITOME, where all the vowels are short AND the the e is pronounced as a long e, as in EEL. These are the joyfully confusing twists and turns of the english language.. A short i is found in the word DIG Another long i word is RIDE, again with a silent e
Yes. The A has a long a sound as in may and take. The E is silent.
The A has a long a sound as in may and take. The E is silent.
Words with long vowel sounds often have a silent "e" at the end (e.g. "make"), a vowel-consonant-e pattern (e.g. "bike"), or a vowel digraph like "ai" or "ee" (e.g. "rain," "see"). Learning common long vowel patterns and practicing identifying them in words can help you figure out words with long vowel sounds.
No. The A has a long A sound as in make and fade. The E is silent.
The silent e at the end of a word usually changes the vowel sound before it. It makes the preceding vowel say its name instead of a short sound. For example, in the word "hope," the silent e changes the pronunciation of the o from a short sound to a long sound.
No he she me sky hi ...any word that does not have a consonant after the vowel leaving the vowel to make its long sound.
No he she me sky hi ...any word that does not have a consonant after the vowel leaving the vowel to make its long sound.
Flute has a long U (long OO) sound, and a silent E. It rhymes with chute or shoot.
#1:Silent e can make the vowel before it long (note).#2: Silent e can make c and g soft (race, page).#3: Silent e keeps u and v from being the last letter in a word (clue, give).#4: Every syllable must have a vowel. Silent e adds a vowel to words with the "consonant+le" pattern, such as handle.#5: Adding a silent e can keep a singular word from ending in s, as in the word goose. Without the e, this would look like a plural word: goos.#6: Other miscellaneous reasons for silent e include:The e used to be pronounced (come).To distinguish between two words (or and ore).
Yes, the word "hour" begins with a vowel but the 'h' at the beginning is silent, so it does not make a sound.