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Silent Letters

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:Ace: | 19:53 Sat 17th Jun 2006 | Phrases & Sayings
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What is the point behind these? They seem to serve no purpose.


For example, Knife or Cupboard with the silent K's and P's.


What's the point?

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I don't know about the k in knife, but the P in cupboard is not actually silent.
It is 'lazy speech'.

Cupboard has evolved from cup board, a board used to store cups.
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Ethel, there is no end to your knowledge!
No end to my googling powers, Ace. :)
Question Author
I like your style lady :-P
Silly me. I thought it was so you could call a bloke rick , with a silent P

About knife: I think you learned from us - the Vikings - and then just forgot. Knife in Swedish is (still) kniv, with an audible k. Probably something similar in Danish, I don't remember right now. Your old Danish king Canute would be called Knut over here. I suppose you people sometimes inserted an a as a strategy to make these words feel more natural to you, and that perhaps you also tried another strategy: To drop the k's completely! So it's a sort of degeneration, really... (he he) Perhaps there was a time when you said canife...


I'm just guessing.

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sounds sensible DaSwede

On silent letters I've always loved this story.


Jean Harlow was at a dinner party and kept on addressing Margot Asquith (wife of prime minister Herbert Asquith) as MargoT (pronouncing the 'T'). Margot finally had enough and said to her "No Jean, the T is silent, as in Harlow".

Question Author
Hmm...i think i get it...as in Harlot? lol! I'm ever so dumb.
Whore !!
DaSwede is mostly correct (except for the additional 'a' theory).

In Old English (circa AD 450 onwards) all letters were pronounced. Prior to the Viking invasions of the 9th & 10th Centuries, knife (spelled cnif) was pronounced with a hard-C (K sound) and it rhymed with sniff.
Likewise knight (spelled cniht) had a hard-C followed by the German sounding nicht.


Middle English (circa AD 1100�1500) saw the introduction of the letter K for the hard-C sound. All letters in word still pronounced.

Early Modern English (circa AD 1500�1800) saw a shift in pronunciation which led to so-called 'silent letters'.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_English_language
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Middle_English
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_Modern_English

btw Canute is also known as Cnut.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canute_the_Great

George Bernard Shaw had a suggestion:


http://www.omniglot.com/writing/shavian.htm


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