No it does not.
Tennessee, Delaware, New Hampshire,
Silent Majority
Yes, the Fifth Amendment
Richard Nixon
I don't know, I was searching for the same and I didn't found it-.-
The silent letter in "more" is the 'e' at the end of the word. It is not pronounced, but it changes the pronunciation of the vowel before it from a short 'o' sound to a long 'o' sound.
Yes.
The silent letter in the word here is the e at the end.
The letter ''e'' on the end
Yes, the words "life" and "knife" have a silent "e" at the end. The "e" is there to modify the pronunciation of the vowel before it.
No, the 'e' sound in the word the is not silent. It is normally pronounced as the indeterminate vowel sound known as the schwa. When it occurs before a vowel sound it is pronounced with a long 'e'.A silent 'e' is not pronounced at all. For example, the 'e' at the end of the word blame is silent: the last phoneme in the word is the 'm'. The 'e' in the could never be silent, as it is the only vowel in the word.
Yes, the word "dice" has a short e sound, pronounced like /dʌɪs/.
yes it does because say it yourself "came" -try it out now- your basically saying (caim) not (caim-e) are you therefore "came" does have a silent 'e' :)
NO . . . the "e" at the end is silent. CH _ A _ R _ J
Not necessarily. Some long vowel words do end with an "e," such as "time" or "bone," but there are also long vowel words that do not end with an "e," such as "sky" or "climb." The presence of an "e" at the end of a long vowel word does not determine whether the vowel sound is long or short.
Neither. The E is silent, as in name. There is just a short "duh" sound at the end.
You would spell value with -ing on the end as valuing.When you add -ing to a verb, and that verb has a silent E on the end, you get rid of the E.