Why are silent letters a thing?

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Why are silent letters a thing?

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15 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Changes in pronunciation. Knight used to be pronounced k-nig-it but over time pronunciation changed but the spelling did not

Anonymous 0 Comments

Different silent letters are there for different reasons.

Some are there because they didn’t used to be silent. The K in knife and knight used to be pronounced, and the gh in knight used to be pronounced like the ch in loch or the h in Ahmed.

In other cases, a silent letter was deliberately added to be more like the Latin word it evolved from. The word debt comes from the French *dette*, and used to be spelled dette in English too, but we started spelling it debt because in Latin it was *debitum*.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Oh I know this one! Because they used to not be.

I asked a Spanish teacher once why H’s are silent and he explained that they weren’t always silent.

Take the english word “name” he said. It used to be pronounced “nah-may”, but over time, we emphasized the first vowel more and more until the m sound merged with the long A and the E became silent.

Some silent letters were pronounced by themselves and some changed the way letters around them sounded. But eventually the pronunciation shifted, but the spelling did not.

Edit to add: and we have to keep the spelling because how a word looks signifies its root origins so we can know its meaning. (Weigh vs Way, Weight vs Wait)

Anonymous 0 Comments

In addition to previous answers about letters originally being articulate or to mark etymology, one other cause is that there are more sounds in English than the Latin alphabet, so inevitably the leftover letters either have to have new letters created for them, or just use combinations of existing ones. When the language became standardized due to the printing press and education, extra letters dropped out of use.

For example, you know that “Ye Olde Shoppe” thing you always see in things? In addition to the final silent e’s which used to be pronounced, the phrase has another history hiding in there: the “Ye” is actually a simplification of “Þe” where “Þ” is capital thorn, the old letter used for what we now use the digraph “th” for.

The letter “Y” happened to look like a capital thorn to English speakers then, so that’s why it replaced it when things were getting simplified and standardized. Add one more change down the timeline, and you realize that the phrase is really “The Olde Shoppe.”

Anonymous 0 Comments

One thing that I haven’t seen mentioned is that early modern scholars were big fans of latin (this is also the origin of ‘you can’t end a sentence with a preposition’ which was true for latin but not for english). There were several words which had changed pronunciation, where some letters stopped being pronounced. And this *was* reflected in the spelling, but the latin-fans changed them back. Off the top of my head, ‘debt’ was often spelled ‘dette’, but the b was reinserted because it was present (and pronounced) in the latin root.

Anonymous 0 Comments

I can’t remember the exact history, but it’s related to a phenomenon in English called ‘The Great Vowel Shift’. As previous comments have said, words were pronounced phonetically, but the accent and tonal pronunciation of England changed rapidly over the space of around 200 years – making the phonetic spellings moot. Lots of spellings haveodernised since, but the silent letters have stuck around.

The weird and wonderful world of medieval linguistics

Edit: whoops: 200 years, not 20

Anonymous 0 Comments

They were often not silent in the past, but I have a compeling reason to keep them, if that’s what you’re asking.

They help you understand the underlying meaning and etimology of words.

Imagine that instead of sign, you would write sine. sounds the same, only a much more “logical” spelling. You would be obscuring the connection between the word sign and signature, where the g is not silent.

it sometimes connects the word to it’s roots, like light (who we should maybe write as lite), comes from (the same origin, possibly, as) the german licht. we don’t pronounce the hard ch sound like in german, but it shows us something about the origin of this word, though. many words that are spelled with gh and have this sound are also from german, not a perfect correlation, but a perfectly good rule of thumb.

Anonymous 0 Comments

In addition to all the other answers, one thing I haven’t seen mentioned is that while some letters might be silent, they’re not always *purposeless*. For example, if you take nearly any three letter word in English that follows the pattern consonant-vowel-consonant (which there are MANY), the vowel will be “short”. But if you put an “e” on the end of that word, the “e” is silent but it makes the other vowel be pronounced “long”.

Examples:

* sin –> sine

* car –> care

* ton –> tone

* met –> mete

* cut –> cute

Anonymous 0 Comments

Linguistics and the development of human language can basically be booked down to “why waste time say lot sound when few sound do trick”

Anonymous 0 Comments

In some cases they may seem silent, but slightly alter the phenome. My last name starts with dze, and it makes the sound of a d while your mouth is in the shape for a z. My name is weird