The word "dough" does not have a silent "g" or "h." The "d" sound at the beginning is pronounced, followed by the long "o" sound. The "gh" in "dough" is actually a digraph that represents the "ow" sound in this case. So, the correct pronunciation is /doʊ/.
E, G & the last H.
The silent letter in the word "ghastly" is the letter "h." In this word, the "gh" combination is pronounced as the "g" sound, so the "h" is silent. The "gh" digraph is a common spelling pattern in English where the "h" is silent and the preceding consonant is pronounced differently.
The silent letters in "doughnut" are the "g" and the "h." The word is typically pronounced as "do-nut."
Both the G and H are silent. The word "night" is pronounced (nyt), using the N, I, and T.
Four: h, o, u, g
Probably because it's not silent. If it was it would sound like the word Cost with A G instead of a C.
In the word "bought," the letters "g" and "h" are silent. The "gh" together makes the "f" sound.
G
The "h" in "ghost" is a silent letter, inherited from the word's Old English roots. Over time, pronunciation changed while the spelling remained consistent, leading to the silent "h" in modern English.
No, the word "when" does not have a silent "h." The "h" sound is pronounced when saying the word.
The g & h sound silent to me. Thought is almost pronounced thot. I guess we'll call it thout.
its the letter H is silent