No it does not.
Tennessee, Delaware, New Hampshire,
Silent Majority
Yes, the Fifth Amendment
Richard Nixon
u have the right to remain silent on the grounds you don't want to incriminate yourself.
No, "contribute" is not a silent 'e' word. The 'e' at the end is pronounced as /e/ in the word.
The E is silent, but indicates that the A has a long A sound.
yes!
Yes.
The silent letters in "foe" are the "e" at the end of the word.
The silent e at the end of a word is usually there to make the vowel before it long (say its name). For example, "mat" becomes "mate" when you add an e at the end.
The "e" at the end of the word "more" is silent. This silent e is the reason it is pronounced with a long o.
The silent letter in the word here is the e at the end.
The silent letter in "force" is the "e" at the end. It is not pronounced in the word.
The letter ''e'' on the end
A silent 'e' at the end of a word can change the preceding vowel from short to long. This phenomenon is known as the silent 'e' rule.
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.