you drop the e
When adding the suffix -ing to the word "glide," drop the final silent "e" before adding the suffix. This is because the silent "e" is typically dropped when adding a vowel suffix to a word that ends in "e."
the present participle of "puke" is "puking"; drop the silent "e" before adding "ing."
When a word ends in a silent "e," the "e" is usually dropped before adding "ing." For example, "bake" becomes "baking" and "hope" becomes "hoping." However, there are some exceptions where the "e" is retained, such as in "being" and "seeing."
One exception to the silent e rule is when adding endings like -ed or -ing to words ending in a consonant and a silent e (e.g., write to writing). Another exception is with words where the final silent e is dropped before a suffix that starts with a vowel (e.g., change to changing).
Sniffle does not drop the e when adding ed, but does drop the e when adding ing. Sniffled, sniffling.
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.
The word is spelled moving. Words that end in e, drop the e before adding ing.
When adding "-ing" to a word ending in "e," you typically remove the "e" to maintain the original pronunciation of the word. This is a spelling rule in English to avoid having double vowels in the word.
Hoping.The correct spelling is "hoping" (the E is dropped when adding -ing).The spelling hopping means moving in hops.
When adding "-ing" to a word ending in a consonant-vowel pattern, drop the vowel before adding "-ing". Most of these words will end in "e". Wrong: skateing Right: skating Wrong: takeing Right: taking Wrong: relateing Right: relating
one possible example would be breathing. breathe - e = breath + ing = breathing
Some examples of words where adding a silent "e" makes the vowel long are "hope," "save," and "slide."