Yes, as a general rule the e is kept.
There isn't a silent consonant in ask - all 3 letters are pronounced.
There is no silent consonant in the word "music".
Lacquer has one silent consonant - q (Q)
No.
The word science has one silent consonant: the first c. Note that it also has one silent vowel: the second e.
Yes, that is correct. When adding a suffix that begins with a consonant to a word ending with a silent "e," the "e" is usually kept to maintain the original pronunciation of the word.
the silent consonant is g
Basic rule is you don't drop the e. Here is an example. love, lovely rare, rarely
There isn't a silent consonant in ask - all 3 letters are pronounced.
PT can't be a beginning consonant blends because of their sounds, they're unsuitable to be put together and sounds like 2 separate syllables when put together, but they can be an ending consonant blend like "except", "concept", etc. If the PT comes at the beginning of the word like "pterodactyl", "pterosaur", then the P is silent and we pronounce like if the word starts with a T.
Yes, the "s" in "says" is a silent consonant.
The "t" in "moist" is the silent consonant.
Yes, in the word "answer," the letter "w" is a silent consonant.
Many words have a silent consonant
There is no silent consonant in the word "music".
The silent consonant in "Solemn" is the "n" at the end of the word.
The silent consonant in the word "whole" is the "w."