Partly.
May women speak in Church? Yes, in the sense of teaching, counseling, testifying, exhorting, and the like; no, in the sense of assuming rule over the Church as such, and in attempting to give direction as to how God's affairs on earth shall be regulated: "A woman has no right to found or organize a church-God never sent them to do it." Paul is here telling the sisters they are subject to the priesthood, that it is not their province to rule and reign, that the bishop's/Pastors wife is not the bishop.
Times have changed from what they were in the days of Paul. The counsel that Paul gave in the branches of the Church in his day was in strict conformity to the law of the times in which he lived. In the beginning it was not so. Paul intimates that Eve was silent because she was created after Adam, but we may read that after the consequences brought upon Adam and Eve by the fall, Eve preached the discourse. It is brief but wonderfully full of meaning and is as follows:
. . . Were it not for our transgression we never should have had seed, and never should have known good and evil, and the joy of our redemption, and the eternal life which God giveth unto all the obedient. (Moses 5:11.)
And Adam and Eve blessed the name of God, and they made all things known unto their sons and their daughters.
And finally,no one is confused by Paul's instruction that members of the church "greet all the brethren with an holy kiss" (1 Thes. 5:26). If we were to attempt to follow such instruction today, no one would dare go to church, regardless of which gender was doing the preaching. As to Paul's statement about women keeping silent, it must have had reference to presiding because he expressly says that they were to both pray and prophesy (see 1 Cor. 11:5). Paul's statements that women were not to speak in church were changed by the Prophet to read "rule," meaning "preside," in his inspired translation of the Bible