Words Where The H Is Silent | Say Them Without The H

Many common words drop the /h/ sound, so you say “our,” “air,” and “onest,” then match spelling to meaning.

You see an h on the page, your mouth gets ready for a puff of air, and then native speakers skip it. That gap can trip up listening, speaking, and even “a” vs. “an” choices.

Below you’ll get the main silent-H word groups, the spelling patterns that repeat, and a practice loop you can run in ten minutes.

What A Silent H Sounds Like

A silent h means the letter is written but the /h/ sound isn’t said. Your voice starts on the next sound. Hour sounds like our. Heir sounds like air. That’s it.

Two fast takeaways:

  • Articles follow sound: you say an hour and an honest answer.
  • Link words together: “in an hour” comes out as one smooth chunk.

Why Some Words Drop The H

English borrowed many words from other languages and kept spellings that don’t match today’s speech. The result is a short list of common words where the written h doesn’t get a voice, plus a few letter clusters where h stays quiet inside a word.

Words Where The H Is Silent In English Spelling

Learn these first. They cover most everyday cases where a word starts with a silent h.

Core Start-Silent Words

Hour (and hours, hourly): Sounds like our. If you want a quick audio check, the Cambridge pronunciation for “hour” gives recordings in major accents.

Honest (and honesty): Starts with a vowel sound, so it takes an: an honest mistake.

Honor / Honour (and honorable): In many accents, the first sound is a vowel, so you’ll hear an honor. The spelling shifts by region; the silent start often stays.

Heir (and heiress, heirloom): Sounds like air. In fast speech, it’s almost a pure vowel start.

Herb: This one splits by region. In American English, many speakers say it like erb. In many UK accents, the /h/ is spoken.

Homage: Often silent at the start in American English, often spoken in many UK accents.

Word Families That Stay Predictable

Once you learn the base word, you can usually keep the same start in close forms:

  • hourhourly, hourglass
  • honesthonesty
  • honorhonorable, honorary
  • heirheiress, heirloom

Still, English has lookalikes that don’t follow the same sound. Heir starts silent, while heritage starts with a spoken /h/ in most accents. Treat each new word as its own sound until you’ve heard it.

Silent H Inside Words

Now the good news: many silent-H cases inside a word follow visible spelling patterns, so you can spot them while reading.

GH Where The H Isn’t Pronounced

In lots of common words, gh doesn’t make an /h/ sound. Often the gh is silent, or it shapes the vowel sound in a way that’s not obvious from the letters.

  • night, light, though, through, daughter
  • ghost: the h is silent; the start is just /g/.

RH Where Only R Is Pronounced

When a word starts with rh, the /h/ is silent and you say an r sound right away:

  • rhyme, rhythm, rhetoric

Merriam-Webster’s overview of silent letters names several silent-h cases, including start-silent words and internal clusters like ghost and rhyme. Merriam-Webster’s silent-letter examples can help you verify what you’ve learned.

Silent H Patterns And Examples

Lists feel heavy. Patterns feel lighter. Use this table as a “spot the pattern” reference while you read, write, or study.

Where The Silent H Appears Pattern To Watch Common Examples
Word start H + vowel in a small set of frequent words hour, honest, honor/honour, heir
Word start (accent split) H + vowel, spoken in some regions herb, homage
After a vowel Vowel + GH that’s silent night, light, though, through, daughter
After G GH where the H is not pronounced ghost, ghastly
After R (word start) RH where only R is pronounced rhyme, rhythm, rhetoric
After W (many accents) WH where H isn’t a separate sound what, when, where
Inside a word CH where you hear /k/ rather than /h/ chemist, chorus, character
Inside a word EXH where /h/ isn’t clear in everyday speech exhaust, exhume

How Silent H Changes What You Hear

Silent-H words often sound like other common words. That’s why they feel slippery in dictation, listening tests, and fast conversation. If your brain expects an /h/ and doesn’t get it, it may “grab” the wrong word and keep going.

Sound-Alike Pairs Worth Learning

  • hourour: Same sound in many accents. Context does the work.
  • heirair: Same sound in many accents.
  • honoronner (in casual speech): You may hear a reduced second syllable, so the word feels shorter than the spelling.

When you meet one of these in a sentence, zoom out. Ask yourself what meaning fits the topic. “Our late” makes no sense, so “hour late” wins.

One Mouth Trick That Helps

For a spoken /h/, you can feel a gentle stream of air before the vowel. Put your hand in front of your lips and say hat. You’ll feel the puff. Now say at. No puff. Silent-H words like hour should feel closer to at than hat.

How To Choose “A” Or “An”

Use an before a vowel sound and a before a consonant sound. Spelling doesn’t decide it.

Common Article Choices

  • an hour, an honest answer, an honor, an heir
  • a hotel, a history book, a hobby

Accent can flip the choice for a small set of words. If you pronounce herb without /h/, you’ll say an herb. If you pronounce the /h/, you’ll say a herb.

Common Errors And Fixes

Most mistakes fall into two types: adding /h/ where none exists, or dropping /h/ where it belongs.

Adding /H/ At The Start

If you catch yourself saying “how-er” for hour, slow down and start on the vowel. Then link it to a word before it:

  • in an hour → “in-an-our”
  • an honest opinion → “an-onest-opinion”

Dropping /H/ In Regular H Words

Most h-starting words do pronounce /h/: home, help, happy, history. If you drop it, the fix is a tiny breath before the vowel, not a harsh sound. Keep it light.

Assuming “Cousin” Words Match

Don’t trust the spelling family tree. Learn tricky pairs together:

  • heir (silent) vs. heritage (spoken /h/)
  • honor (often silent) vs. honorary (often keeps the same start, yet say it aloud to confirm)

Spelling Tips For Learners Who Write A Lot

Silent letters can mess with spelling because you can’t “hear” them. A simple fix is to tie the silent h to a spelling anchor.

  • Hour: link it to hourglass. The extra letters help you picture the word.
  • Honest: link it to honesty. The ending changes, yet the silent start stays.
  • Heir: link it to inherit as a meaning cue, even if the /h/ sound differs in some related words.

If you’re writing essays, keep a personal “tricky words” list. Add one sentence of your own under each word. Personal sentences stick better than copied lines.

Ten-Minute Practice Loop

You don’t need a giant drill list. You need a short loop you’ll actually repeat.

Pick Six Words And Use Phrases

Choose four start-silent words and two pattern words. Then say each inside a short phrase:

  • an hour late
  • an honest review
  • an heir to the estate
  • it’s an honor
  • a ghost story
  • a rhyme scheme

Record, Listen, Repeat

Record yourself once. Play it back and listen for a breathy /h/ at the start of the silent words. Fix one phrase at a time, five repeats each.

Shadow A Native Clip For Two Minutes

Pick one short clip with clear speech, then shadow it: listen to one sentence, pause, copy the rhythm, then move on. Pay attention to the word boundary before the silent-H word. If the clip says “in an hour,” you want the same glide from an into hour without a breathy break.

Read Aloud With Target Words Marked

Take a paragraph from your class notes and mark any silent-H targets. Read it once slowly, once at normal speed. If you stumble, circle the word and write a short phrase under it that uses the right article, like “an hour” or “an honest answer.”

Fast Checks For New Words

When you meet a new word, use these checks. They won’t catch every edge case, yet they help you avoid the most common slip-ups.

Clue You Notice What It Suggests What To Do Next
The word is hour, honest, honor/honour, heir Start is silent Begin on the vowel; write “an”
The word is herb or homage Accent split Copy the local sound you hear; match “a/an” to that sound
You see vowel + gh No /h/ sound Learn the whole word sound; don’t try to “say the letters”
You see rh at the start H is silent Say an r sound right away
You see wh at the start H isn’t a separate sound in many accents Say it like w in everyday speech; listen for regional “hw”
You’re unsure and it’s a test word Guessing is risky Check a dictionary audio clip, then repeat the word in a phrase

Short Checklist For Editing And Speaking

  • Did I start the word on a vowel in hour, honest, honor, and heir?
  • Did I pick a or an based on sound, not spelling?
  • Did I treat herb and homage as accent-sensitive?
  • Did I practice new words inside short phrases?

Master these few patterns and you’ll stop second-guessing the letter on the page. Your ear will lead, and your speech will follow.

References & Sources