you drop it
Some examples of words where adding a silent "e" makes the vowel long are "hope," "save," and "slide."
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).
In "silent E" words such as bite, mite, site, white, the E ending changes the sound of the short I to a long I. There are no English words where a final single E sounds like a long I. However, there are IE words such as die, pie, lie, and vie, and YE endings such as bye and dye.
The EA vowel pair is a long E sound.EA words include beam, cream, dream, gleam, ream, seam, and steam.Most EE words have the long E, as do E words ending in a silent E (such as extreme).
In "bridge", the d is silent because it has a "dge" trigraph ending.
#1:Silent e can make the vowel before it long (note).#2: Silent e can make c and g soft (race, page).#3: Silent e keeps u and v from being the last letter in a word (clue, give).#4: Every syllable must have a vowel. Silent e adds a vowel to words with the "consonant+le" pattern, such as handle.#5: Adding a silent e can keep a singular word from ending in s, as in the word goose. Without the e, this would look like a plural word: goos.#6: Other miscellaneous reasons for silent e include:The e used to be pronounced (come).To distinguish between two words (or and ore).
No, in the word "assigned," the final 'e' is not silent. It is pronounced as part of the -ed ending sound.
Yes, in have 'e' is always a silent e.The word "the" does not have a silent e.
Yes, that is correct. When adding a suffix that begins with a consonant to a word ending with a silent "e," the "e" is usually kept to maintain the original pronunciation of the word.
There are several 2 letter words ending in the letter e. These words include be, he, me, as well as we.
The ending phonetic sound is the letter T (the e is silent).