In called you have (pronounce) /d/, because /l /is a voiced sound; in asked you pronounce /t/ because /k/ is an unvoiced sound; in added or decided you pronounce /id/ because when you have -d or -t at the root of the word, the rule is to pronounce -ed is /id/.
The base word for "winner" with the ending "ed" is "win".
words ending in ed
keyed
No, in the word "assigned," the final 'e' is not silent. It is pronounced as part of the -ed ending sound.
The base word in "hoped" is "hope," while the ending is "-ed." Adding "-ed" to the base word changes it to past tense, indicating that the action of hoping has already occurred.
omitted
Stold is not a word. It is sometimes a childish error for "stole", by adding the usual past ending "ed" to the irregular past formed by changing the vowel sound. This is a mistake not a word. There is a word "stolid" meaning phlegmatic, unemotional and disinclined to change.
No. -ed makes it sound like an extra syllable but it isn't.
Generally, many verbs will add "ed" to the ending to symbolize that it is the past tense. Example: Walked, Jumped, Hugged, Climbed, Played.
The "e" in an "-ed" past-tense verb ending is pronounced as /ɪd/ when the base form of the verb ends in a "t" or "d" sound. For example, in verbs like "wanted" or "needed," the "e" is pronounced as /ɪd/.
The word wish is a regular verb. The past tense is wished.
By ending with -ed.