Silent Letters by Word Origin: Greek, French, and Latin Patterns

Published on December 13, 2025
Text-to-speech not available in this browser

English's notorious silent letters aren't random—they follow patterns based on word origins. Understanding these patterns helps you predict pronunciation and remember spellings.

Greek Origins: Silent Initial Consonants

Words from Greek often have silent letters at the beginning that were originally pronounced in Ancient Greek:

Silent P (before N, S, T)

Pattern: pn-, ps-, pt- = silent P

Silent G (before N)

Silent K (before N)

These come from Old English/Germanic, not Greek, but follow a similar pattern:

French Origins: Silent Final Consonants

French loanwords often keep their spelling but drop final consonant sounds:

Silent Final T

Silent Final S

Silent Final X

Latin Origins: Silent Letters in the Middle

Latin-origin words often have silent consonants in consonant clusters:

Silent B

Silent C

Patterns Summary

OriginPatternExamples
GreekSilent initial pn-, ps-, pt-pneumonia, psychology, pterodactyl
GreekSilent initial gn-gnome, gnostic
GreekSilent ch = /k/chaos, character
FrenchSilent final -tballet, depot, debut
FrenchSilent final -s, -xdebris, faux, rendezvous
LatinSilent b after mclimb, tomb, bomb
LatinSilent b before tdoubt, debt, subtle
GermanicSilent kn-, wr-, gn-knife, write, gnaw

Words Where Letters Aren't Silent

Be careful—similar spellings can have different pronunciations:

SilentPronounced
knife /naɪf/kindred /ˈkɪndrəd/
gnome /noʊm/ignite /ɪɡˈnaɪt/
psychology /saɪˈkɑːlədʒi/upset /ʌpˈset/
debt /det/obtain /əbˈteɪn/

Practice: Predict the Pronunciation

Using the patterns above, try to predict how these words are pronounced:

  1. pneumatic - (Greek pn-) = /nuːˈmætɪk/
  2. chassis - (French final -s) = /ˈʃæsi/
  3. gnocchi - (Italian gn-) = /ˈnjɒki/
  4. rapport - (French final -t) = /ræˈpɔːr/

💡 Enjoying the content?

Get more pronunciation tips delivered to your inbox

No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.