In many varieties of English the final r in flower is silent unless the word is followed by a vowel. Answer As above, the varieties of English which elide the "r" include Australian, NZ and Sth African (non-rhotic) while many varieties like some US English, Scots English, being rhotic, sound the "r".
The W may be considered silent because the OW pair is pronounced as a long O (groh).
The W is silent in the pronunciation (reeth).
Well, phonetically, the word 'bouquet' should be pronounced 'bo-keht' but it is actually pronounced 'bo-kay' so the 't' is silent, I guess
There are no silent letters in girl. All letters are pronounced: /ɡərl/
Hjhghu
HjhghuHjhghu
No. Garden has no silent letters.
W
the w
W
The letters b and e are silent in subtle.
There are no silent letters, all letters are sounded.
The 'w' is silent.
P + L are the silent letters. The word is pronounced like "Sam"
H is the silent letter
In the words provided, the silent letters are as follows: In "Week," there are no silent letters. In "Won," the letter "W" is silent. In "Flower," there are no silent letters. In "Blew," there are no silent letters, and in "Dew," again, there are no silent letters.
The silent letter in the word "wrote" is the silent W.
The word "queue" has the most silent letters, with all four of its letters being silent.
In the phrase "bouquet of flowers," there are 12 letters. Out of these 12 letters, 7 are consonants (excluding the spaces). So the fraction of consonants in the phrase is 7/12.
The letters b and e are silent in subtle.
The silent letters in the word "throat" are the 'h' and the 'a'.
The letters UBTOEUQ are an anagram of "bouquet."
There are no silent letters, all letters are sounded.
The letters "h" and "o" are silent in the name Christopher.
In the word "depot," the letters "e" and "t" are silent.
The silent letters in the word "right" are the 'gh.'
The silent letters in "foe" are the "e" at the end of the word.