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  1. An ‘e’ on the end of words is there for a number of reasons. Most commonly it is part of a split digraph indicating that the vowel before the consonant will be pronounced as a long vowel sound (rat-rate, pet-Pete, win-wine, hop-hope, cut-cute). However, there are several other reasons that words end with an unpronounced ‘e’ and each of ...

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    • Silent final e makes the vowel say its name. Compare the pronunciation of the following pairs of words: con cone. cut cute. mat mate. In cone, the e makes the o say “O”.
    • English words don’t end in v or u. The e at the end of have and blue do not affect pronunciation. The e is there because the words would otherwise end in v or u. Impromptu is one of the few exceptions to this rule.
    • Silent E after the letters C and G “soften” their sounds. The letter C can represent the sounds of either /k/ as in cat or /s/ as in cent. The letter G can represent the sounds of either /g/ as in gum or /j/ as in gym.
    • Every syllable must have a vowel. In words like candle, pickle, and people, the final syllable can be pronounced without a vowel, but “in English, every syllable must have a vowel.”
  2. Dec 9, 2014 · The silent ‘e’ tells us how to pronounce other letters in the word, i.e. it helps with pronunciation. A silent ‘e’ at the end of a one or two syllable word tells you to use a long vowel sound for the earlier vowel (s) in the word. A long vowel sound is the sound a vowel makes when you say its name, like when you are reciting the ...

  3. Dec 27, 2015 · This is the origin of the modern spelling ‘rule’ about ‘silent e’ in such words as name and rose” (p. 42). Anglo-Saxon monks couldn't use the silent vowel strategy to show a long vowel because every letter was pronounced in Old English. If there was a vowel at the end of a word, it would be sounded.

  4. Oct 7, 2019 · 4. A Matter of Singular and Plural. In a word that ends with s, but is not plural and is not a floss word, silent e comes at the end. This helps you distinguish between words with the suffix s and basewords that end in s. For example, in the sentence, The cow moos.; moos is comprised of the baseword moo with the suffix -s.

  5. Sometimes, the final silent “e” serves a purpose. Silent E. A silent “e” at the end of a word can change the pronunciation and meaning of a word (e.g., hop vs. hop e). But it also changes the pronunciations in words in which omitting the “e” isn’t possible (e.g., strik e or bik e). Not only can silent “e’s” change the ...

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  7. Feb 6, 2016 · Suffixes Starting with Vowels. The key rule is that, most of the time, you should drop the “e” from the end of a word when adding a suffix that begins with a vowel (e.g., “-ing,” “-ed” or “-able”). For example, we can add the suffix “-ed” to the word “talk” to make “talked” without any problem. But when a word ...

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