{{Short description|Common occurrence of "e" as a silent letter in English, like in "like"}} {{for|unpronounced {{angle bracket|e}} in French|e muet}} {{DISPLAYTITLE:Silent ''e''}} {{More citations needed|date=March 2022}} {{IPA notice}} In English orthography, many words feature a '''silent {{angle bracket|e}}''' (single, final, non-syllabic, magic "e"), most commonly at the end of a word or morpheme. Typically it represents a vowel sound that was formerly pronounced, but became silent in late Middle English or Early Modern English.
In a large class of words, as a consequence of a series of historical sound changes, including the Great Vowel Shift, the presence of a suffix on the end of a word influenced the development of the preceding vowel, and in a smaller number of cases it affected the pronunciation of a preceding consonant. When the inflection disappeared in speech, but remained as a historical remnant in the spelling, this silent {{angle bracket|e}} was reinterpreted synchronically as a marker of the surviving sounds.
This can be seen in the vowels in word-pairs such as ''rid'' {{IPAc-en|r|ɪ|d}} and ''ride'' {{IPAc-en|r|aɪ|d}}, in which the presence of the final, unpronounced {{angle bracket|e}} appears to alter the sound of the preceding {{angle bracket|i}}. An example with consonants is the word-pair ''loath'' (loʊθ) and ''loathe'' (loʊð), where the {{angle bracket|e}} can be understood as a marker of a voiced {{angle bracket|th}}.
As a result of this reinterpretation, the {{angle bracket|e}} was added by analogy in Early Modern English to many words which had never had a pronounced {{angle bracket|e}}-inflection, and it is used in modern neologisms such as ''bike'', in which there is no historical reason for the presence of the {{angle bracket|e}}, because of a perceived synchronic need to mark the pronunciation of the preceding vowel.
Although Modern English orthography is not entirely consistent here, the correlation is common enough to allow a rule-of-thumb to be used to explain the spelling, especially in phonics education, where a silent {{angle bracket|e}} which has this effect is sometimes called a '''magic''', '''sneaky'''<ref>{{cite book |last1=Beck |first1=Isabel L. |last2=Beck |first2=Mark E. |date=2024 |title=Making Sense of Phonics: The Hows and Whys |location=New York |publisher=Guildford Press |page=13 |isbn=978-1462555369}}</ref>, or '''bossy'''<ref name="bossy">{{cite book |title=Teacher Guide Unit 35, Alphabet Detective |date=1998 |url=https://archive.org/details/teacherguideunit0000vari_x8w6/page/n31/mode/2up?q=%22bossy+e%22|isbn=9781593184582 |page=26}}</ref> '''{{angle bracket|e}}'''. Orthographic linguist Gina Cooke uses the term '''replaceable {{angle bracket|e}}'''<ref>{{Cite web |last=LEX |date=2017-11-13 |title=The Science of Silence {{!}} Linguist~Educator Exchange |url=https://linguisteducatorexchange.com/2017/11/13/the-science-of-silence/ |access-date=2022-08-27 |language=en-US}}</ref> since replaceability is the consistent mark of the single final non-syllabic {{angle bracket|e}}, and its "silence" differs from other "silent" letters' functions. Some practitioners of Structured Word Inquiry have adopted that terminology.<ref>{{cite web|last=Ramsden|first=Melvyn|date=2004|title=Suffix Checker|url=http://files.realspellers.org/PetesFolder/resources/Checker-standard.pdf|access-date=2019-11-30|archive-date=2021-08-14|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210814014230/http://files.realspellers.org/PetesFolder/resources/Checker-standard.pdf|url-status=dead}}</ref>
==Effect on vowels== Depending on dialect, English has anywhere from 13 to more than 20 distinct vowel phonemes, both monophthongs and diphthongs. A silent {{angle bracket|e}}, in association with the Latin alphabet's five vowel characters, is one of the ways by which some of these vowel sounds are represented in English orthography.
A silent {{angle bracket|e}} in association with the other vowels may convert a short vowel sound to a long vowel equivalent, though that may not always be the case. The short vowels are {{IPAc-en|æ|_|ɛ|_|ɪ|_|ɒ|_|ʌ}} while the equivalent long vowels are {{IPAc-en|eɪ|_|iː|_|aɪ|_|oʊ|_|j|uː}}. However, because of the complications of the Great Vowel Shift, the long vowel is not always simply a lengthened version of the corresponding short one; and in most cases (for example with ''ride'') is in fact a diphthong ({{IPAc-en|r|aɪ|d}}).
To create a long vowel, there is usually only one consonant between the silent {{angle bracket|e}} and the preceding vowel. In some cases two consonants may also have the same effect, as in ''table'', ''paste'' and ''bathe'', while in other cases no consonants are found, as in ''tie'', ''toe'' and ''due''. The presence of a double consonant may indicate that the {{angle bracket|e}} is not silent and does not affect the preceding vowel (as in ''Jesse'' and ''posse'').
{| class="wikitable" !Modern spelling !Short vowel<br>Without silent {{angle bracket|e}} !Long vowel<br>With silent {{angle bracket|e}} !IPA transcription |- || ''slat, slate'' || ''slăt'' || ''slātɇ''|| {{IPA|/slæt/}} → {{IPA|/sleɪt/}} |- || ''met, mete'' || ''mĕt'' || ''mētɇ'' || {{IPA|/mɛt/}} → {{IPA|/miːt/}} |- || ''grip, gripe'' || ''grĭp''|| ''grīpɇ''|| {{IPA|/ɡrɪp/}} → {{IPA|/ɡraɪp/}} |- || ''cod, code'' || ''cŏd'' || ''cōdɇ'' || {{IPA|/kɒd/}} → {{IPA|/koʊd/}} |- || ''cut, cute'' || ''cŭt'' || ''cūtɇ'' || {{IPA|/kʌt/}} → {{IPA|/kjuːt/}} |}
In English, the name of a vowel is its long vowel form (except in the case of {{angle bracket|y}}, which has the same pronunciation as {{angle bracket|i}} – compare ''byte/bite'').
This terminology reflects the historical pronunciation and development of those vowels, but as a phonetic description of their current values it may no longer be accurate. The English values of the letters {{angle bracket|a, e, i, o, u}} used to be similar to the values those letters had in Spanish, French or Italian, namely {{IPAblink|a}}, {{IPAblink|e}}, {{IPAblink|i}}, {{IPAblink|o}}, {{IPAblink|u}}. The Great Vowel Shift leading to Early Modern English gave current English "long vowels" values that differ markedly from the "short vowels" that they relate to in writing. Since English has a literary tradition that goes back into the Middle English period, written English continues to use Middle English writing conventions to mark distinctions that had been reordered by the chain shift of the long vowels. However, the pronunciation of {{angle bracket|u}} before silent {{angle bracket|e}}, found mainly in borrowings from French and Latin, is a consequence not of the Great Vowel Shift but of a different series of changes.
When final {{angle bracket|e}} is ''not'' silent, this may be indicated in various ways in English spelling. When representing {{IPAc-en|iː}}, this is usually done via doubling (''refugee'', ''employee'', with ''employe'' as an obsolete spelling). Non-silent {{angle bracket|e}} can also be indicated by a diacritical mark, such as a grave accent (''learnèd'') or a diaeresis (''learnëd, Brontë''). Other diacritical marks are preserved in loanwords (''résumé'', ''café'', ''blasé''), or introduced on this pattern (''maté''), though these diacritics are frequently omitted. Other words have no indication that the {{angle bracket|e}} is not silent (''pace'', Latin loanword meaning "with due respect to").
===The {{angle bracket|a}} group=== The sounds of the {{angle bracket|a}} group are some of the more dialectically complex features of contemporary modern English; the phonemes represented in modern "short" {{angle bracket|a}} include {{IPAc-en|æ}}, {{IPAc-en|ɑː}}, and {{IPAc-en|ɔː}}. See ''broad A'' and ''cot–caught merger'' for some of the cross-dialect complexities of the English {{angle bracket|a}} group. A silent {{angle bracket|e}} typically moves {{angle bracket|a}} to {{IPAc-en|eɪ}}.
===The {{angle bracket|e}} group=== Silent {{angle bracket|e}} typically moves {{angle bracket|e}} to {{IPAc-en|iː}}. This change is generally consistent across nearly all English dialects today, though previously many dialects used {{IPA|/eː/}} instead before migrating to {{IPA|/iː/}}. Some parts of Mid-Ulster English still use {{IPA|/eː/}}.
===The {{angle bracket|i}} group=== For the "long vowel" represented in written English by {{angle bracket|i}}, the effect of silent {{angle bracket|e}} is to turn it into a diphthong {{IPAc-en|aɪ}}. If {{Angle bracket|i}} precedes a word final {{Angle bracket|que}}{{Spaced en dash}}which usually occurs in words of French origin (''unique, pique)''{{Spaced en dash}}or the rarer {{Angle bracket|gue}} (''fatigue, intrigue)'' the silent {{Angle bracket|e}} appears to turn {{Angle bracket|i}} into {{IPA|/iː/}}.
===The {{angle bracket|o}} group=== Short {{angle bracket|o}} often falls in with short {{angle bracket|a}} and shares some of the complexities of that group. Variously, the written short {{angle bracket|o}} can represent {{IPAc-en|ɒ}}, {{IPAc-en|ʌ}}, and {{IPAc-en|ɔː}}. The usual effect of silent {{angle bracket|e}} on written {{angle bracket|o}} is to fix it as a long {{IPAc-en|oʊ}} sound.
===The {{angle bracket|u}} group=== Short {{angle bracket|u}} can variably represent either {{IPAc-en|ʌ}} or {{IPAc-en|ʊ}}, as a result of the ''foot–strut'' split. Silent {{angle bracket|e}} generally turns {{angle bracket|u}} to its corresponding long version {{IPAc-en|j|uː}}, which developed from Middle English {{IPA|/ɪu/|cat=no}}. Variably by dialect and even word, the {{IPAc-en|j}} in this {{IPAc-en|j|uː}} may drop (''rune'' {{IPAc-en|ˈ|r|uː|n}}, ''lute'' {{IPAc-en|ˈ|l|uː|t}}), causing a merger with {{IPAc-en|uː}}; in other cases, the {{IPA|/j/}} coalesces with the preceding consonant (''issue'' {{IPAc-en|ˈ|ɪ|s|.|j|uː}} → {{IPAc-en|ˈ|ɪ|ʃ|uː}}), meaning that the silent {{angle bracket|e}} can affect the quality of a consonant much earlier in the word (''fissure'' {{IPAc-en|ˈ|f|ɪ|ʃ|.|ə|(|r|)}}, ''nature'' {{IPAc-en|ˈ|n|eɪ|tʃ|ər}}).
==Effect on consonants== In addition to indicating that a preceding vowel is a long vowel, a silent {{angle bracket|e}} when it immediately follows a {{angle bracket|c}} or {{angle bracket|g}} also indicates that the {{angle bracket|c}} is a soft {{angle bracket|c}} and the {{angle bracket|g}} is a soft {{angle bracket|g}}. For example:
*''Măc'' > ''mācɇ'' ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|m|æ|k}} → {{IPAc-en|ˈ|m|eɪ|s}}) *''stăg'' > ''stāgɇ'' ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|s|t|æ|ɡ}} → {{IPAc-en|ˈ|s|t|eɪ|dʒ}})
where {{IPAc-en|s}} is the expected outcome of the {{angle bracket|ce}} digraph, and the {{angle bracket|ge}} in ''stage'' is pronounced {{IPAc-en|dʒ}}. The same effect on {{angle bracket|c}} and {{angle bracket|g}}, but not the preceding vowel, arises in words such as "chance" and "forge". To stop this softening effect, a silent {{angle bracket|u}} is added before {{angle bracket|e}}, as in "plague" and "fugue".
Silent {{angle bracket|e}} is used in some words with {{angle bracket|dg}} in which it does not lengthen a vowel: ''rĭdgɇ'', ''slĕdgɇ'', ''hŏdgɇ-pŏdgɇ''. Spelling such words with {{angle bracket|j}}, the other letter that indicates that sound, does not occur in native or nativized English words.
The same softening effect ({{Grapheme|c}} {{IPA|/k/ → /s/}} and {{angle bracket|g}} {{IPA|/ɡ/ → /dʒ/}}) also arises with a following (i) or (y).
In word-final position, a similar softening effect can occur with the digraph {{angle bracket|th}} {{IPA|/θ/ → /ð/}}; often the form with the {{angle bracket|e}} is a verb related to the noun form without the e: *''bath, bathe'' ({{IPA|/bæθ/, /beɪð/}}) *''breath, breathe'' ({{IPA|/bɹɛθ/, /bɹið/}}) *''cloth, clothe'' ({{IPA|/klɔθ/, /kloʊð/}})
==Truly silent {{angle bracket|e}}== In some common words that historically had long vowels, silent {{angle bracket|e}} no longer has its usual lengthening effect. For example, the {{angle bracket|o}} in ''come'' (as compared to in ''cone'') and in ''done'' (as compared to in ''dome''). This is especially common in some words that historically had {{angle bracket|f}} instead of {{angle bracket|v}}, such as ''give'' and ''love''; in Old English, {{IPAslink|f}} became {{IPAslink|v}} when it appeared between two vowels (OE ''giefan, lufu''), while a geminated {{angle bracket|ff}} lost its doubling to yield {{IPAslink|f}} in that position. This also applies to a large class of words with the adjective suffix ''-ive'', such as ''captive'' (where, again, the {{angle bracket|i}} is not lengthened, unlike in ''hive''), that originally had ''-if'' in French.
Some loanwords from French (''promenade'') retained their French silent {{angle bracket|e}}, called ''e muet'' or ''e caduc'', which has no effect on the preceding vowel. Also, the feminine forms of some words of French origin end in a silent {{angle bracket|e}}, for example ''fiancée'', ''petite'' and ''née''.
Some English words vary their accented syllable based on whether they are used as nouns or as adjectives. In a few words such as ''minute'', this may affect the operation of silent {{angle bracket|e}}: as an adjective, ''minúte'' ({{IPAc-en|m|aɪ|ˈ|nj|uː|t}}, "small") has the usual value of {{angle bracket|u}} followed by silent {{angle bracket|e}}, while in the noun ''mínute'' ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|m|ɪ|n|ᵻ|t}}, the unit of time), silent {{angle bracket|e}} does not operate. See initial-stress-derived noun for similar patterns that may give rise to exceptions.
Historically, following the French usage, it was the practice to add a silent {{angle bracket|e}} at the end of words for aesthetic purposes. For example, words ending in ''-le'' (as in ''subtle'' and ''table'') as well as following an {{angle bracket|s}} (such as ''house'' and ''tense'', etc) have a redundant silent {{angle bracket|e}}. In the past, the silent {{angle bracket|e}} was also added to many nouns for similar stylistic reasons, such as ''poste'', ''teste'', etc.
==Dropping of silent {{angle bracket|e}}== A silent {{angle bracket|e}} is usually dropped when a suffix beginning with a vowel is added to a word, for example: ''cope'' to ''coping'', ''trade'' to ''tradable'', ''tense'' to ''tension'', ''captive'' to ''captivate'', ''plague'' to ''plaguing'', ''secure'' to ''security'', ''create'' to ''creator'', etc. However, this is inconsistently applied, as in the case of ''liveable''. In the case of the "-ment" suffix, there is also a divergence of practice. In American English, ''judge'' usually becomes ''judgment'', while in British English the e is usually retained, as in ''judgement''.
The silent {{angle bracket|e}} is usually kept when it is preceded by a {{angle bracket|c}} or {{angle bracket|g}} and the suffix does not start with {{angle bracket|e}}, {{angle bracket|i}}, or {{angle bracket|y}} to keep its softening effect (i.e. ''change'' to ''changeable'', ''outrage'' to ''outrageous'', etc.).
A silent {{angle bracket|e}} is not usually dropped in compound words, such as ''comeback''.
==History== Silent {{angle bracket|e}}, like many conventions of written language that no longer reflect current pronunciations, was not always silent. In Chaucer's ''Balade'', the first line does not scan properly unless what appears to current eyes to be a silent {{angle bracket|e}} is pronounced:
:''Hyd, Absolon, thy gilt'''è''' tresses cler'''è'''''
''Gilte'' ends in the same sound as modern English ''Malta''. In Middle English, this final schwa had some grammatical significance, although that was mostly lost by Chaucer's time. It was elided regularly when a word beginning with a vowel came next. The consequences of silent {{angle bracket|e}} in contemporary spelling reflect the phonology of Middle English. In Middle English, as a consequence of the lax vowel rule shared by most Germanic languages, vowels were long when they historically occurred in stressed open syllables; they were short when they occurred in "checked" or closed syllables. Thus ''bide'' {{IPA|/ˈbiːdə/}} had a long vowel, while ''bid'' {{IPA|/bid/}} had a short one.
The historical sequence went something like this: *In Old English, a phonological distinction was made between long and short vowels. *In Middle English, vowel length was lost as a phonological feature, but was still phonetically present. A word like ''bide'', syllabified ''bi.de'' and phonetically pronounced {{IPA|[biːdə]}}, had one stressed, open, long syllable. On the other hand, the word ''bid'', although stressed, had a short vowel: {{IPA|[bid]}}. *At some unknown point, the phonetically long vowels began to diphthongize. This was the start of the Great Vowel Shift. Possibly at the same time, the short vowels became lax. So as "bide" {{IPA|[biːdə]}} became {{IPA|[bɨidə]}}, "bid" {{IPA|[bid]}} changed to {{IPA|[bɪd]}}. *At a later point, all word-final schwas were lost. The phonetic motivation for lengthening the vowel—the open syllable—was lost, but the process of diphthongization had already begun, and the vowels which had once been identical except for length were now phonetically dissimilar and phonologically distinct.
The writing convention of silent {{angle bracket|e}} indicates that different vowel qualities had become phonemic, and were preserved even when phonemic vowel length was lost.
Long vowels could arise by other mechanisms. One of these is known as "compensatory lengthening"; this occurred when consonants formerly present were lost: ''maid'' is the modern descendant of Old English ''mægde''. In this example, the ''g'' actually became a glide {{IPA|/j/}}, so in a sense, the length of the consonant stayed where it always had been, and there was no "compensation". The silent {{angle bracket|e}} rule became available to represent long vowels in writing that arose from other sources; Old English ''brŷd'', representing *''bruʒd-i-'', became Modern English ''bride''.
The rules of current English spelling were first set forth by Richard Mulcaster in his 1582 publication ''Elementarie''. Mulcaster called silent {{angle bracket|e}} "qualifying {{angle bracket|e}}", and wrote of it: <blockquote>It altereth the sound of all the vowells, euen quite thorough one or mo consonants as, máde, stéme, éche, kínde, strípe, óre, cúre, tóste sound sharp with the qualifying E in their end: whereas, màd, stèm, èch, frind, strip, or, cut, tost, contract of tossed sound flat without the same E, And therefor the same loud and sharp sound in the word, calleth still for the qualifying e, in the end, as the flat and short nedeth it not. It qualifyeth no ending vowell, bycause it followeth none in the end, sauing i. as in daie, maie, saie, trewlie, safetie, where it maketh i, either not to be heard, or verie gentlie to be heard, which otherwise would sound loud and sharp, and must be expressed by y. as, deny, aby, ally. Which kinde of writing shalbe noted hereafter. It altereth also the force of, c, g, s, tho it sound not after them, as in hence, for that, which might sound henk, if anie word ended in c. in swinge differing from swing, in vse differing from vs. </blockquote> Mulcaster also formulated the rule that a double letter, when final, indicated a short vowel in English, while the absence of doubling and the presence of silent {{angle bracket|e}} made the vowel long. In modern English, this rule is most prominent in its effects on the written "a" series: *''gal, gall, gale'' ({{IPA|/ɡæl, /ɡɔːl/, /ɡeɪl/}}).
Digraphs are sometimes treated as single letters for purposes of this rule: *''bath, bathe'' ({{IPA|/bæθ/, /beɪð/}}) *''breath, breathe'' ({{IPA|/bɹɛθ/, /bɹið/}}) *''cloth, clothe'' ({{IPA|/klɔθ/, /kloʊð/}})
==In popular culture== *Tom Lehrer wrote a song called "Silent E" for the children's television series ''The Electric Company'' in 1971. In it, he asks the musical questions: *:''Who can turn a ''căn'' into a ''cānɇ''?<br>Who can turn a ''păn'' into a ''pānɇ''?<br>It's not too hard to see.<br>It's Silent "E"!'' *A character is named "Silent E" in ''Between the Lions''. *A series of similar songs about "Magic E" was featured in the British educational series ''Look and Read'' between 1974 and 1994, written by Roger Limb and Rosanna Hibbert and performed by Derek Griffiths. *In ''Alphablocks'', Magic E is E's impish alter-ego, with a black ninja outfit and a top hat. He does not speak, but in the episode ''Magic'', he sings a song about himself while he causes mischief. *In ''The Electric Company (2009 TV series)'', Lin-Manuel Miranda raps "Silent E is a Ninja".
==Notes and references== ===Notes=== {{Notefoot}}
===References=== {{Reflist}}
==See also== *I before E except after C *Silent letter *{{section link|Albanian language|Sounds}}, the Gheg dialect of Albanian also uses "silent e" to mark long vowels earlier in the word
==External links== *[http://www.indiana.edu/~reading/phonics/u2/whistory.pdf ''Early Modern English''] (PDF) *[https://web.archive.org/web/20050503170131/http://www.reading.org/Library/Retrieve.cfm?D=10.1598%2FRRQ.34.1.6&F=RRQ-34-1-Templeton.pdf ''Questions teachers ask about spelling''] by Shane Templeton and Darrell Morris (PDF) *[http://www.hti.umich.edu/cgi/p/pd-modeng/pd-modeng-idx?type=header&byte=51422115 ''Elementarie'']{{dead link|date=May 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} by Richard Mulcaster *[https://revistaliterariakatharsis.org/Richard_Mulcaster.pdf ''Mulcaster's "Elementarie"''] by Richard Mulcaster *[http://dmdb.org/lyrics/lehrer.misc.html#silente ''Silent E''], complete lyrics by Tom Lehrer *[http://www.lookandread.fsnet.co.uk/downloads/ ''Look and Read'' downloads] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050429065920/http://www.lookandread.fsnet.co.uk/downloads/ |date=2005-04-29 }}, including a version of the ''Magic E'' song
{{DEFAULTSORT:Silent E}} E E