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Silent Letters in English: The Ones 11+ Students Get Wrong

11 Apr 20269 min readIntermediate

A guide to the silent letter words that catch out 11+ students most often. Grouped by letter with memory tricks, etymology, fill-in-the-blank exercises, and a dictation list.

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Why English Has Silent Letters

Here's a question that annoys every child who has ever tried to spell "knight": if you don't say the K, why is it there? The answer is that English spelling is a bit like an archaeological dig. Letters that nobody pronounces today were once spoken aloud, hundreds of years ago. Spelling froze in place while pronunciation wandered off in its own direction.

That's frustrating, but it's also useful to know. Once you understand why the letters are there, they stop feeling random and start forming patterns you can actually learn.

Key Takeaway: Silent letters aren't mistakes. They're historical clues. Learning the patterns behind them is far more effective than trying to memorise each word individually.

In the 11+ exam, silent letter words crop up in spelling tasks, dictation exercises, and creative writing. Misspelling "island" or "receipt" in a story costs marks on your SPaG score, so getting these right is well worth the effort. The groups below cover every silent letter pattern you're likely to meet.

Old handwritten manuscript showing English words with their historical spellings

Silent K: The Ghostly Knight

In Old English, the K in words like "knight" and "knee" was pronounced. People really did say "k-nee" and "k-nife", which sounds wonderfully strange to modern ears. By about the 1600s, English speakers had quietly dropped the K sound before N, but the spelling never caught up.

The pattern: Silent K always appears before N at the beginning of a word.

  • knee — the joint you kneel on (also a "k-nee" in Middle English)
  • knife — from Old English cnif
  • knight — once "k-nicht", a young man who served
  • knock — the K was fully voiced until Shakespeare's day
  • knot — tied rope, also related to the German Knoten
  • know — the K still sounds in German kennen
  • knuckle — literally "little bone joint"
  • knit — from Old English cnyttan
Memory trick: Say it silly. When you practise these words, say the K out loud: "k-nife, k-night, k-nock." It feels absurd, but that deliberate exaggeration fixes the spelling in your brain.

Silent W: The Invisible Writer

Just like the silent K, the W at the start of "write" and "wrong" was once pronounced. Old English speakers said "w-ritan" for write. The W gradually fell silent before R, but the spelling stayed put.

The pattern: Silent W appears before R at the beginning of a word.

  • write — from Old English writan, to scratch or score
  • wrong — from Old Norse wrangr, crooked
  • wrist — the twisting joint
  • wreck — something wrecked or twisted apart
  • wrinkle — a small twist or fold in the skin
  • wrestle — to twist and grapple
  • wrap — to fold around
  • wren — the tiny bird

Notice a theme? Many of these words involve twisting, turning, or bending. That's not a coincidence. The Old English wr- prefix often carried a sense of something twisted or turned.

Fun fact: In some Scottish dialects, people still pronounce a faint W before R. So "write" sounds slightly different from "right". English spelling isn't as mad as it looks when you listen to the right accent.

Silent P: Greek Gifts

Words with a silent P at the start nearly all come from Greek. In ancient Greek, the combination "ps" was a normal sound that Greek speakers had no trouble pronouncing. When English borrowed these words, the P became too awkward for English tongues, so we stopped saying it while leaving the spelling intact.

The pattern: Silent P appears before S, N, or T at the beginning of a word, almost always in words of Greek origin.

  • psychology — from Greek psyche (soul) + logos (study)
  • pneumonia — from Greek pneumon (lung)
  • psalm — from Greek psalmos (song played on a harp)
  • pterodactyl — from Greek pteron (wing) + daktylos (finger)
  • pseudonym — from Greek pseudos (false) + onyma (name)
Memory trick: If a word starts with P and the next letter is S, N, or T, the P is almost certainly silent. Think: "P is politely quiet before its Greek friends."

Here's a useful connection: psyche means soul or mind, which is why psychology (study of the mind), psychiatrist (doctor of the mind), and psychic (mind-reader) all share that silent P opening. Knowing the root unlocks a whole family of words.

Silent B: The Hidden Climber

Silent B follows two main patterns. In one group, B sits after M at the end of a word. In the other, B appears before T. Both patterns have historical explanations, but the practical point is simple: learn the two positions and you've covered almost every silent B word you'll meet.

Pattern 1 — B after M (end of word):

  • climb — the B was pronounced in Old English
  • lamb — once "lamb-b" in Anglo-Saxon speech
  • thumb — related to German Daumen
  • comb — the B was sounded until Middle English
  • bomb — borrowed from Italian bomba
  • crumb — the B was actually added later by scholars wanting the word to look more Latin
  • numb — from Old English niman, to take away (feeling)
  • plumber — from Latin plumbum (lead), because pipes were made of lead

Pattern 2 — B before T:

  • doubt — from Latin dubitare
  • debt — from Latin debitum
  • subtle — from Latin subtilis (fine, delicate)
Watch out: "Doubt" and "debt" had their B's added by medieval scholars who wanted the words to look more like their Latin ancestors. The French originals (doute, dette) had no B at all. So you can blame a long-dead scholar for these ones.

Silent T, C, and Other Oddities

Beyond the big four (K, W, P, B), English has scattered silent letters in various other positions. These don't form patterns as neatly, but they're common enough to be worth learning.

Silent T:

  • listen — say "liss-en", not "list-en"
  • castle — say "cass-ul"
  • whistle — say "wiss-ul"
  • often — historically silent T, though some speakers now pronounce it
  • fasten — say "fass-en"

Silent C:

  • muscle — from Latin musculus (little mouse, because muscles looked like mice under the skin)
  • scissors — the SC combination is a Latin leftover
  • scene — from Greek skene

Other silent letters:

  • island — the S is silent (from Old English igland; the S was added to make it look like Latin insula)
  • receipt — the P is silent (from Latin recepta)
  • autumn — the N is silent (from Latin autumnus)
  • column — the N is silent (from Latin columna)
  • solemn — the N is silent (from Latin solemnis)
The island mystery: "Island" never had an S in Old English. It was igland (literally "water-land"). Sixteenth-century scholars added the S because they mistakenly thought it came from the Latin insula. It didn't. The S has been squatting there illegally for about 500 years.

Fill-in-the-Blank Exercise

For each sentence, fill in the missing silent letter. Write out the complete word.

  1. The brave _night rode across the drawbridge. (k)
  2. She cut the bread with a sharp _nife. (k)
  3. The _rinkled map showed a secret path. (w)
  4. He _rote a letter to his grandmother. (w)
  5. The doctor said she had _neumonia. (p)
  6. My sister is studying _sychology at university. (p)
  7. I have no dou_t that we'll win the match. (b)
  8. The cat was su_tle in its approach to the bird. (b)
  9. Please li_ten carefully to the instructions. (t)
  10. The fairy tale was set in a crumbling ca_tle. (t)
  11. The i_land appeared through the morning mist. (s)
  12. Keep the recei_t as proof of purchase. (p)
How to check your answers: Cover the hints in brackets. Write each word in full on scrap paper. Then uncover and compare. If you got any wrong, say the word in its "silly pronunciation" three times to lock the correct spelling in.

Dictation Practice List

Ask a parent or study partner to read these sentences aloud while you write them down. Each sentence contains at least two silent letter words. After writing, check your spelling carefully.

  1. The knight climbed the castle wall in autumn.
  2. I know the answer, so please listen carefully.
  3. The wren sat on a thumb-sized branch by the island.
  4. She had no doubt about her knowledge of psychology.
  5. The plumber used a wrench to fix the column of pipes.
  6. It was a solemn scene as the lamb was led away.
  7. He wrestled with his conscience and made a subtle decision.
  8. The doctor needed a receipt for the pneumonia medicine.

Mark your work and note any mistakes. Practise those specific words using Look-Cover-Write-Check before trying the dictation again later in the week.

Pattern-Matching Quiz

For each word below, identify which letter is silent. Then sort the words into the correct group.

Words: psalm, knuckle, wrist, debt, muscle, receipt, wrestle, lamb, solemn, knot

GroupYour answers
Silent K___________
Silent W___________
Silent P___________
Silent B___________
Other silent letters___________

Answers: Silent K: knuckle, knot. Silent W: wrist, wrestle. Silent P: psalm, receipt. Silent B: debt, lamb. Other: muscle (silent C), solemn (silent N).

For more spelling pattern practice, see our guide to essential spelling rules for the 11+ or test yourself with our 100 words every 11+ student should spell.

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