i before e, except after c.
Vital to know in this day and age.
i before e, except after c.
Vital to know in this day and age.
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Shalom/salaam.
10,000 years of Middle Eastern civilisation and the place is not at peace but rather in pieces.
Sorry, apologies, but I couldn’t resist.
That is the rule, but English being English, as you say there are exceptions.
For example;
Agreeing, albeit, Alzheimer's, ancient, atheism, beige, Beijing, being, caffeine, concierge, deicide, deify, deign, deindustrialize, deity, disagreeing, dreeing, dreidel, eigen, eight, either, Fahrenheit, feign, feisty, foreign, foreseeing, forfeit, freight, geitost, gesundheit, heifer, height, heinous, heir, heist, herein, inveigle, kaleidoscope, keister, lei, leisure, Madeira, meiosis, neigh,neighbour, neither, obeisance, onomatopoeia, peine, poltergeist, protein, reign, reignite, reimburse, rein, reindeer, reindustrialize, reinforce, reinstall, reinvest, reisolate, reissue, safeish, scarabaeid, schlockmeister, science, seeing, seigniorial, seine, seismic, seize, sensei, sheik, skein, sleigh, sleight, sovereign, species, stein, surfeit, surveillance, their, theism, therein, veil, vein, weigh, weight, weir, weird, wherein, whereinto, xanthein, zeitgeist, zootheism.
Pity anyone learning it as a foreign language.
"ei" is rare except when used after "c" to form "cei";
"cie" is more rare (it occurs mostly in the plural of nouns ending "-cy" such as efficiency).
The rule has several exceptions, including when the "ei" makes the long "a" sound such as in "neighbour," "weigh," or "beige."
blue rebel (24-02-16), Curvaceous Kate (24-02-16)
Curvaceous Kate (24-02-16), SteveB (24-02-16)
Last edited by alcatel; 24-02-16 at 19:01. Reason: The zeitgeist, 4 millennia ago in the Mediterranean region.
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Shalom/salaam.
10,000 years of Middle Eastern civilisation and the place is not at peace but rather in pieces.
I think tomorrow's class should be about
I have done or I did
I have seen or I saw
"I seen" and "I done" really gets on my tits
Curvaceous Kate (24-02-16)
Curvaceous Kate (24-02-16), TonyB (24-02-16)
The convention/idea with this, is that it relates to a select number of words that rhyme with each other and look a bit alike.
Believe
Receive
Conceive
Relieve
This is how I always understood it, and it's probably mainly aimed at primary school children.
It is useful to spell a few common words like receive, believe.
But some guy in the internet age (very possibly American) didn't understand this and decided to trawl the dictionary for words outside the pertinent few.
The same guy probably started the claptrap about irony (or its lack) in the famous Alanis Morissette song.
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Shalom/salaam.
10,000 years of Middle Eastern civilisation and the place is not at peace but rather in pieces.
I try to keep quite quiet.
Curvaceous Kate (25-02-16)