Any and all words that are spelled that way: consonant vowel consonant silent e. Examples : wine, dine, cane, zone, bane, bone, tine, mine, and so forth.
Some four letter words that start and end with vowels and have consonants as the middle letters are:abbaacheechoaxleidleableogle
consonant vowel consonant ending in e
Some examples of words with short 'e' spelled 'oe' are: leopard, jeopardy, and foetus.
Some words that are spelled with an E and a J are:abjectadjacentadjectivebluejaycajoleconjugateconjuredejectedejectenjoyfrijoleinjectinjureinterjectjacketjackhammerjackknifejadejaggedjalapenojanglejasminejasperjaundicejavelinjealousjeansjeepjeerjejunejellyjellybeanjeopardizejerkjerseyjetjettyjewelJezebeljinglejittersjivejockeyjoeyjoggerjokerjostlejubileejudgejugglejuicejujubejumbleJunejunglejunketjusticejuvenilemajesticobjectperjuryprejudiceprojectrejectrejoicerejuvenatesubjecttrajectory
Some examples are laugh, cough, rough.
No. The word formed from the verb believe is spelled believable. Some words do retain the final E that follows a consonant, for specific pronunciations : changeable (GE), noticeable (CE). Double E endings are always retained (e.g. agreeable).
Yes, some words with the letter "o" followed by a consonant and then "e" can have a short "u" sound, such as "come" and "some." In these cases, the "o" takes on a different pronunciation due to the following consonant.
safe plane lake
uke, use
eve eke
The letter E is a vowel when it is pronounced as "ee," as in the words "see" or "me." However, it can also represent the "eh" sound in certain words like "bread," where it functions as a consonant.